Post on 15-Jul-2020
transcript
2018 VIA REPORTNUMBER 32
DEPARTMENT HEAD’S MESSAGE
I am proud to present this annual Via Report summarizing the department’s accomplishments during the 2017-2018 academic year. The Charles E. Via, Jr. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering has continued to build upon its outstanding reputation and continues to produce excellent and successful graduates each year.
Among those excellent students are our Via Scholars. I know that the Via family would be proud of the work these students are doing and their service to the profession and society. Take a moment to look through their profiles and learn more about each of these scholars. Hopefully, you will have the opportunity to interact with them when you visit campus, through professional activities, or as future employers. Each year, with the influx of these new scholars, we, as faculty, are reminded how fortunate we are to be part fo the Via Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.
The strength of our department has always been and continues to be our students, faculty, community, and culture. Our students’ success is a testament to their drive and commitment, but also to the exceptional faculty that we have to lead them along the way. This semester, we will be adding four new faculty to our outstanding team of educators: Dr. Alexander Brand, Dr. Stan Grant, Dr. Megan Rippy, and Dr. Rodrigo Sarlo. You can read more about each of them on page nine.
There are also several articles on the research efforts that are in progress within the department and the accomplishments and honors that our faculty have been awarded this year. These are just a small portion of the work that our faculty are doing to improve the world that we all live in. Albert Einstein once said “Engineers create that which has never been.” Our faculty and students continue to push the boundaries to discover new and innovative ways to improve the civil and environmental engineering profession.
We just welcomed a new group of students to CEE at the start of the semester. It is very gratifying to witness the popularity of our programs and we certainly look forward to doing our part in educating future members of our profession.
I’m looking forward to another exciting year and, once again, thank you for your support. I’d like to give a
2 2018 VIA REPORT
special thanks to all of our alumni, friends and colleagues who have generously supported the department. These gifts are helping to develop a new generation of engineers ready to invent the future and improve the world we live in. Read more about this on page four. Please visit cee.vt.edu and join us on Facebook and Twitter to follow the latest news and research going on in the department.
With kind regards,
Sam Easterling Montague-Betts Professor of Structural Steel Design and Department Head
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Virginia Tech does not discriminate against employees, students, or applicants on the basis of age, color, disability,
gender, gender identity, gender expression, national origin, political affiliation, race, religion, sexual orientation, genertic
information, or veteran status, or otherwise discriminate against employees or applicants who inquire about, discuss, or
disclose their compensation or the compensation of other employees or applicants, or any other basis protected by law.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
DEPARTMENT HEAD’S MESSAGE ....................................................................................................................... 2, 4
STUDENT NEWS
Undergraduate Scholarships ............................................................................................................................ 5
Graduate Scholarships ...................................................................................................................................... 6
Ph.D. degrees awarded .......................................................................................................................................7
FACULTY
CEE Faculty by Program Area ............................................................................................................................ 8
Faculty Honors and Achievements ................................................................................................................... 9
New Faculty ....................................................................................................................................................... 10
PROGRAM AREAS
Vecellio Construction Engineering and Management Program ................................................................... 11
Environmental and Water Resources Program .............................................................................................14
Geotechnical Program .....................................................................................................................................20
Structural Engineering and Materials Program ...........................................................................................22
Transportation Infrastructures and Systems Engineering Program ........................................................ 24
RESEARCH NEWS
Chema de la Garza .............................................................................................................................................13
Linsey Marr .........................................................................................................................................................18
Jennifer Irish ......................................................................................................................................................19
Kitty Hancock ....................................................................................................................................................26
VIA SCHOLARS .......................................................................................................................................................... 27
VIA DONORS ...............................................................................................................................................................41
DEPARTMENT HEAD ......................................................................................................................... W. Samuel Easterling
EDITOR AND DESIGNER.............................................................................................................................. Courtney Sakry
The CEE alumni board have continuously expressed that they do not fully understand the importance of philanthropy to the department, general aspects of the university budget, and the ways that philanthropy helps differentiate our program in a positive way. When they became more engaged with the department, it was then that it made more sense. The alumni board has encouraged me utilize the Via Report to provide an overview of some aspects of the university budget.
I cannot explain the university budget in only a paragraph, but my intent is to provide clarification to a few misconceptions. The department operates with funding from different sources, including: tuition and tax revenue from the Commonwealth of Virginia, externally obtained research funding, and philanthropic gifts. Tuition and tax revenue are predominately used to pay faculty and staff during the academic year. Research funding is obtained through competitive proposals developed by faculty and is used to support the projects, including graduate student stipends and tuition, which the sponsors have specifically chosen to fund. Philanthropic gifts to the department by alumni, friends of the department, foundations, and corporations are used to support students and faculty. While unrestricted gifts provide support at the general university, college, or department level, many are designated by the donors to specific purposes, such as an undergraduate scholarship, graduate fellowship, or faculty professorship. It is not uncommon to hear or read in the
media that the university should use money for students and faculty instead of building athletic facilities or dormitories. Auxiliary enterprises as described on the Office of Budget and Financial Planning webpage, are entities that exist, per Code of Virginia, to furnish goods or services to students, faculty, or staff. A very important aspect of the funding of auxiliary enterprises is that they are financially self-supporting and do not receive tuition revenue or state tax dollar appropriations. These entities charge for services provided and revenue is generated through cash sales and student fees. Examples of auxiliary enterprises are athletics,
dorm, and dining operations – and all are primarily funded through sales of goods and services along with donors that designate their support toward these specific initiatives.
So, why does philanthropy matter to our department? Simply put, the gifts we receive from alumni, parents, and friends provide the department with the ability to support students and faculty in ways that we could not do otherwise. The support provided by our alumni and friends help to
differentiate our program. Through scholarship and fellowship funding, we are able to attract and support our outstanding students. The funding provided for faculty fellowships and professorships enable us to recruit and retain outstanding faculty. Philanthropic gifts support student programs, study abroad opportunities, student participation in professional conferences, and classroom or laboratory renovations. Collectively the faculty, students and staff that we are able to recruit, support and retain differentiates us from many of our peers.
Recently, donations to the university seem to support high
profile building projects, departmental naming, and other major endowments. The size and impact of these gifts generate visibility that positively increase recognition and reputation for Virginia Tech. However, gifts made on an annual basis that support the department – not of the amount needed to establish endowments – are critical to our success. During the first annual Giving Day held earlier in the year, I was proud to see that the number of gifts made by CEE alumni and friends was among the highest in the college. Likewise, the CEE alumni board members lead the way in giving rates among departmental boards in the college.
My sincerest thanks to you for taking the time to
read this and especially to those who give so generously to our department. Your support is one of the big ways we are able to differentiate the department among our peers. I know that I can speak for our students, staff, and faculty when I say that they sincerely appreciate your support as well.
Please do not hesitate to contact me at ceedepthead@vt.edu if you have questions or simply would like to discuss any of the topics further.
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UNIVERSITY BUDGET 101: WHY PHILANTHROPY MATTERS TO OUR DEPARTMENT
CE Alumni Board Scholarship Conor Dane
William Hiatt
Connor Leslie
William Roxby
Aleia Warren
Kenneth R. Ayers ‘80 Memorial Scholarship Emma Helfrich
Sayed Rohani
Kelso Baker Scholarship Elliott Delp
Cassidy Moran
Daneil Ott
Rusty Rouiller
Michael Baker Corporation Engineering Scholarship Jack Popelka
Balzer & Associates Scholarship Adam Caretti
Tierney Lesinski
James L. Bland Civil Engineering Scholarship Peter Vaccacio
Charles and Patricia Brown Scholarship Darko Stanisic
Everett Carter Memorial Scholarship Paige West
William A. Caruthers CE Scholarship Connor Hays
Erin Hrovatic
Joseph and Jane Christenbury Memorial Scholarship Keneil Gordon
Civil Engineering Class of ‘58 Scholarship Anna Bohlmann
Casey Britt
Kyrsten Dallanegra
Elizabeth Smith
Daniel Szalecki
Warren F. Cline Scholarship Caleb Wade
Stanley and Francis Cohen Scholarship Daneila Charles
Zabih Safi
John DeBell Civil Engineering ScholarshipKyle Hogan
Dewberry ScholarshipJacob Golub
Walter and Mary Ruth Duncan ScholarshipWilliam Roxby
Delaney Snead
Chelsey A. Godfrey ScholarshipEmma Helfrich
Lois Cox and Edna Goodwin ScholarshipCarly Edwards
Ralph P. Hines ‘59 ScholarshipJonathan Epperson
Charles S. Hughes ScholarshipJohn Chu
Emily Garbera
Williams A. Joyner ScholarshipKase Poling
Dennis & Sherry Kamber ScholarshipElliot Idio
Hersie B. & Ethel G. McCauley ScholarshipGenevieve Davis
Caroline Kersey
Andrew “Tripp” McDavid Memorial ScholarshipBrent Reynolds
Kenton & Liliana Meland ScholarshipWilliam Hiatt
Newport News Shipbuilding ScholarshipKevin Curse
John E. Pruitt, Jr. Scholarship William Cole
Louis Hatcher
Richard Quarterman ‘04 Memorial ScholarshipAhmed Ahmed
Howell & Ann Simmons Land Development Design ScholarshipJulia Cadman
Stantec Award for Excellence in EngineeringMargaret Wilcher
George A. Stewart Scholarship Alison Beisner
Julia Cadman
Kevin Cruse
Philip Gotthelf
Melissa Joyce
Laura Nicaise
Victor O’Toole
Sophia Schenk
Zachary Shugart
Lucy Travers
Adrianna Weber
L.J. Turner & W.S. Dewhirst Scholarship Mark Remmey
Austin Wydajewski
Vecellio Scholarship Sydney Greenspan
Rebecca King
Danielle Lehman
Daniel Szalecki
Lucy Travers
Aleia Warren
Robert Witte
Virginia Concrete Scholarship Kevin Kumordzie
Sayed Rohani
Darko Stanisic
Donald and Mary Wiebke Scholarship Lucy Travers
Harry S. & Patsy B. Williams Scholarship William Hiatt
Williams Industries Scholarship Kevin Cruse
Ethan Obenrader
Verne & Jewel Williamson Scholarship Miranda Tison
UNDERGRADUATE SCHOLARSHIPS
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Ann N. and Thomas N. Hunnicutt, III FellowshipBing Xu
AWWA Graduate Student ScholarshipShiqiang Zou
Brian R. Bluhm Memorial FellowshipDylan Russell Honardoust
He Yang
Carl O. Sundberg ScholarshipLaura Nicaise
Davenport Leadership ScholarDeborah McGlynn
Deloitte Foundation Data Analytics Fellowship
Kaveh Bakhshkelarestaghi
DFI at Large ScholarshipRoger Knittle
DRRM ScholarshipAnmol Haque
Edna Bailey Sussman FellowshipMatthew Ferby
Carlos Fernando Mantilla Pena
Katherine Santizo
Kory David Wait
Frederick “Fritz” Hoffman ‘13 ScholarshipLaura Nicaise
Freeman FellowshipNicholas Gentile
Fulbright ScholarshipMuhammad Ali
Julio Copana Paucara
Mohammad Yunus Naseri
Martin Scavone
GRADUATE SCHOLARSHIPS AND FELLOWSHIPS
GEM Associate FellowshipCharlie Grinton
Dwayne Jefferson
Jalen Johnson
Daniel Keku
Kathryn Lopez
George A. Stewart Engineering ScholarshipLaura Nicaise
ICTAS Fellow Rebecca Kriss
John and Natalie Hawkins Memorial FellowshipMilad Abedi
Leifur Eiriksson Foundation FellowshipThomas Kennedy
Matthew G. Gwaltney Memorial FellowshipLaura Nicaise
Multicultural Academic Opportunities Program (MAOP)Charlie GrintonDwayne JeffersonJalen JohnsonCarlos Fernando Mantilla PenaJeannie Purchase Marian Alicea
Myers-Lawson Doctoral FellowshipMayank Khurana
National Research Traineeship, Disaster Resilience and Risk ManagementMichael Lee
National Science Foundation Graduate Research FellowshipAbraham Cullom
Ayella Maile-Moskowitz
Hanniyah Majeed
Brooke Baugher
NCC (National Capital Chapter) CMAA (Construction Management Association of America) ScholarshipSogand Mohammadhasanzadeh
New Horizon Graduate ScholarMaria Amaya
Sergio Marlon Ballivan
Stefany Baron
Benjamin Cole Davis
Charlie Grinton
Joel Javier
Dwayne Jefferson
Jalen Johnson
Kathryn Lopez
Hanniyah Majeed
Cristopher Montalvo
Julie Paprocki
Jeannie Purchase
Sasha Redmon
Katherine Santizo
Pratt Graduate FellowshipReem Jaber
Trai Nguyen
Jin Pan
Zixuan Wang
Raymond G. and Madelyn A. Curry Graduate Fellowship Dennis Kiptoo
Matthew Roever
Mohsen Zaker Esteghamati
Terracon FellowshipManish Dulal
Hunter Ingram
US Air Force Academy Faculty PipelineVincent Bongioanni
Vecellio Scholarship Brooke Baugher
Virginia Water Resources Center Student Competitive Grant ProgramSarah Busch
Walts FellowshipRebecca Kriss
WaterINTERface IGEP (Indisciplinary Graduate Education Program) FellowshipAkshay Jian
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The following doctoral degrees were
awarded to CEE students between
Summer II 2017 and Summer I 2018:
Name: Seyyed AbtahiDissertation Title: Implications of
Shape Factors on Fate, Uptake and
Nanotoxicity of Gold Nanomaterials
Advisor: Peter Vikesland
Name: Thomas AdamsDissertation Title: The Use of
Central Tendency Measures from
an Operational Short Lead-time
Hydrologic Ensemble Forecast
System for Real-time Forecasts
Advisor: Randy Dymond
Name: Ali AlbatalDissertation Title: Advancement
of Using Portable Free Fall
Penetrometers for Geotechnical Site
Characterization of Energetic Sandy
Nearshore Areas
Advisor: Nina Stark
Name: Cagdas BiliciDissertation Title: Development
of a Sediment Sampling Free Fall
Penetromater Add-on Unit for
Geotechnical Characterization of
Seabed Surface Layers
Advisor: Nina Stark
Name: Emily GarnerDissertation Title: Occurrence and
Control of Microlbial Contaminants
of Emerging Concern through
the Urban Water Cycle: Molecular
Profiling of Opportunistic Pathogens
and Antibiotic Resistance
Advisor: Amy Pruden-Bagchi
Name: Edwin Gonzalez MontvaloDissertation Title: Influence of
Project-Level Characteristics and
Factors on Innovation and Value
Creation in US Highway Public-
Private Partnership Projects
Advisor: Michael Garvin
Name: Pan JiDissertation Title: Effect of
Water Chemistry, Pipe Material,
Termperature and Flow on the
Building Plumbing Microbiome and
Opportunistic Pathogen Occurance
Advisor: Amy Pruden-Bagchi
Name: Xiaojin LiDissertation Title: Anammox-based
Technologies for Sustainable
Mainstream Wastewater Treatment:
Process Development, Microbial
Ecology and Mathematical Modeling
Advisor: Jason He
Name: Yi LiuDissertation Title: Investigation of the
Spatiotemporal Evolution of Tropical
Cyclone Storm Surge under Sea
Level Rise
Advisor: Jennifer Irish
Name: Shuai LuoDissertation Title: Development of
Integrated Photobioelectrochemical
System (IPB): Processes, Modeling
and Applications
Advisor: Jason He
Name: Victory OdizeDissertation Title: Diffuser
Fouling Mitigation, Wastewater
Characteristics and Treatment
Technology Impact on Aeration
Efficiency
Advisor: Adil Godrej
Name: Julia Roa PerezDissertation Title: Development
of Aircraft Wake Vortex Dynamic
Separations Using Computer
Modeling
Advisor: Antonio Trani
Name: Katherine PhetxumphouDissertation Title: Novel Approaches
to Exposure Assessment and Dose
Response to Contaminants in
Drinking Water and Food
Advisor: Daniel Gallagher
Name: Craig PowersDissertation Title: Monitoring the
Transport of Microorganisms
in Aquatic Environments Using
Unmanned Surface Vehicles
Advisor: DG Schmale and Linsey Marr
Name: Mohan QinDissertation Title: Resource Recovery
by Osmotic Bioelectrochemical
Systems Towards Sustainable
Wastewater Treatment
Advisor: Jason He
Name: Siddhartha RoyDissertation Title: Interplay of
Water Chemistry and Entrained
Particulates in Erosion Corrosion
of Copper and Nonleaded Alloys in
Potable Water Systems
Advisor: Marc Edwards
Name: Yasaman ShahtaheriDissertation Title: A Probabilistic
Decision Support System for a
Performance-Based Design of
Infrastructures
Advisor: Jesus de la Garza and Madeleine Flint
Name: Duc TranDissertation Title: Experiments on
the Transformation of Mud Flocs in
Turbulent Suspensions
Advisor: Kyle Strom
Name: Berk UsluDissertation Title: Development
of Protocols and Methods
for Predicting the Remaining
Economic Life of Wastewater Pipe
Infrastructure Assets
Advisor: Sunil Sinha
Name: Yan WangDissertation Title: Tracking Disaster
Dynamics for Urban Resilience:
Human-Mobility and Semantic
Perspectives
Advisor: John Taylor and Michael Garvin
Name: Haoran WeiDissertation Title: Surface-
Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy
for Environmental Analysis -
Optimization and Quantitation
Advisor: Peter Vikesland
Name: Marjorie WillnerDissertation Title: Environmental
Analysis at the Nanoscale: From
Sensor Development to Full Scale
Data Processing
Advisor: Peter Vikesland
Name: Heyang YuanDissertation Title: Bioelectrochemical
Systems: Microbiology, Catalysts,
Processes and Applications
Advisor: Jason He
PH.D. DEGREES
VECELLIO CONSTRUCTION ENGINEERING AND MANAGEMENT
Jesus M. de la Garza, Vecellio Professor / Program CoordinatorMichael J. Garvin, Associate ProfessorFarrokh Jazizadeh Karimi, Assistant ProfessorFrederick Paige, Assistant ProfessorTripp Shealy, Assistant ProfessorSunil K. Sinha, Professor
ENVIRONMENTAL & WATER RESOURCES ENGINEERING
Andrea M. Dietrich, ProfessorRandel L. Dymond, ProfessorMarc A. Edwards, University Distinguished ProfessorDaniel L. Gallagher, ProfessorAdil N. Godrej, Research Associate Professor (OWML)Stan Grant, Professor (OWML)Zhen (Jason) He, ProfessorErich T. Hester, Associate Professor Clay Hodges, Research Assistant ProfessorJennifer L. Irish, ProfessorGabriel Isaacman-VanWertz, Assistant ProfessorWilliam R. Knocke, Professor John C. Little, Charles E. Via, Jr. Professor Linsey C. Marr, Charles P. Lunsford ProfessorAmy J. Pruden, W. Thomas Rice ProfessorMegan Rippy, Assistant Professor (OWML)Robert Paolo Scardina, Assistant Professor of PracticeKyle Strom, Associate ProfessorPeter J. Vikesland, Nick Prillaman Professor / Program
CoordinatorZhiwu (Drew) Wang, Assistant Professor (OWML)Claire White, Assistant Professor of PracticeMark A. Widdowson, Assistant Department Head and Professor Kevin Young, Assistant Professor of Practice
GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERINGThomas L. Brandon, ProfessorJoseph E. Dove, Associate Professor of Practice George M. Filz, Charles E. Via, Jr. Professor Russell A. Green, ProfessorMatthew Mauldon, Associate ProfessorAdrian Rodriguez-Marek, Professor/Program CoordinatorNina Stark, Assistant ProfessorAlba Yerro Colom, Assistant Professor
FACULTY
STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING AND MATERIALS Finley A. Charney, ProfessorW. Samuel Easterling, Department Head and Montague-Betts
Professor of Structural Steel DesignMatthew R. Eatherton, Raymond G. and Madelyn Ann Curry
Faculty Fellow in Structural EngineeringMadeleine M. Flint, Assistant ProfessorMatthew H. Hebdon, Assistant ProfessorEric Jacques, Assistant ProfessorIoannis Koutromanos, Assosciate ProfessorRobert T. Leon, David H. Burrows Professor/Program
CoordinatorCarin L. Roberts-Wollmann, ProfessorRodrigo Sarlo, Assistant ProfessorMaryam Shakiba, Assisant Professor
TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE AND SYSTEMS ENGINEERING
Montasir Abbas, ProfessorAlexander S. Brand, Assistant ProfessorGerardo W. Flintsch, ProfessorKathleen L. Hancock, Associate ProfessorKevin P. Heaslip, Associate Professor / Program CoordinatorSusan Hotle, Assistant Professor Bryan J. Katz, Assosciate Professor of PracticeHesham A. Rakha, Samuel Reynolds Pritchard Professor of
EngineeringAntonio A. Trani, Professor Linbing Wang, Professor
EMERITUS FACULTYGregory D. Boardman, EWRThomas E. Cousins, SEMWilliam E. Cox, EWRDonald R. Drew, TISEJ. Michael Duncan, GEOTAntoine G. Hobeika, TISERobert C. Hoehn, EWRSiegfried M. Holzer, SEMJ. Martin Hughes, EWRDavid F. Kibler, EWR Thangavelu Kuppusamy, GEOTJames K. Mitchell, GEOTThomas M. Murray, SEMJohn T. Novak, EWR Raymond H. Plaut, SEMClifford W. Randall, EWRKamal B. Rojiani, SEMDusan Teodorovic, TISE Michael C. Vorster, CEM Richard E. Weyers, SEM
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Jason HeNamed Associate Editor for the Science of the Total Environment,
the Journal of Environmental Engineering, and Water Environment
Research
Member of the Editorial Board for Chemical Engineering Journal
Water L. Huber Civil Engineering Research Prize by ASCE
Peter VikeslandAppointed the Nick Prillaman Professor
2018 Walter J. Weber, Jr. AEESO Frontier in Research Award
Ioannis KoutromanosPromoted to Associate Professor with tenure
Randy DymondPromoted to Professor
Kyle StromG.V. Loganathan Award
Russell GreenCEE Alumni Teaching Excellence Award
Gerardo FlintschCollege of Engineering Dean’s Award for Excellence in Research
Paolo Scardina Academic Integrity and Excellence Award
Carin Roberts-Wollman
Montasir Abbas College of Engineering Dean’s Award for Excellence in Service
Promoted to Professor
Bryan KatzExcellence in Transportation Engineering Education Award by the
Institute of Transportation Engineers
Promoted to Associate Professor of Practice
Linsey MarrAppointed the Charles P. Lunsford Professor
Nina Stark was awarded a National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) award to study soil mechanics in response to hydrodynamic forcing and morphodynamics. Her goals through this research are to measure and assess strength and pore pressure in response to nearshore and coastal sediments under forcing, while
Stark earns two national honors in 2018
Jennifer IrishFulbright Fellowship in Haifa, Israel
FACULTY HONORS AND ACHIEVEMENTS
also educating students in a multi-disciplinary manner in coastal processes and soil mechanics through the integration of an undergraduate field research program. She hopes this will also raise awareness and educate the public about sea level rise and climate change related increase of inundation events.
Stark was also selected by the Office of Naval Research for its 2018 Young
Investigator Program to further her research into geotechnical soil characterizations from remote sensing for the assessment of coastline strength, stability, and trafficability. The award supports laboratory equipment, graduate student stipends and scholarships, and other expenses critical to ongoing and planned investigational studies.
Matt EathertonAppointed the Raymond G. and Madelyn Ann Curry Faculty Fellow in
Structural Engineering
Roberto LeonReappointed the David H. Burrows Professor of Construction
Engineering
John LittleReappointed the Charles E. Via, Jr. Professor of Civil and
Environmental Engineering
Kevin Young Certificate of Teaching Excellence in the College of Engineering
MEET THE NEW FACULTY
Alex Brand / TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE AND SYSTEMS ENGINEERING
Alex S. Brand earned three degrees in civil engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. His research interests include materials science of cementitious materials with particular interest in advanced characterization techniques to interrogate the nature of bonding, microstructure development, and reaction and hydration kinetics. He studies concrete sustainability through using recycled and by-product aggregates and looks at the materials design and analysis for two-lift concrete paving, roller-compacted concrete, fiber-reinforced concrete, and concrete with high volumes of recycled materials. He was a postdoctoral research associate at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) where he developed an unprecedented digital holographic microscopy technique to monitor real-time evolution of surface topography with nanoscale vertical precision to quantify rate kinetics.
Stan Grant / ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCES
Stan Grant is joining as a Professor in the Occoquan Watershed Monitoring Laboratory. He comes to Virginia Tech from his position as a Professor of civil and environmental engineering in the Henry Samueli School of Engineering at the University of California, Irvine. Grant earned his B.S. from Stanford University in Geology, as well as an M.S. and Ph.D. in Environmental Engineering Science from Caltech in Pasdena, California. His research interests focus on human and ecosystem water security, coastal and drinking water quality, environmental fate and transport modeling. He has given many invited lectures, received academic and non-academic awards and honors, and also has extensive environmental consulting experience..
Megan Rippy / ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCES
Megan A. Rippy is joining as an Assistant Professor. She previously served as an Assistant Project Scientist in civil and environmental engineering at the University of California Irvine. She earned her B.S. from the University of California Santa Cruz in Marine Biology. She also earned an M.S. from the University of California San Diego in Marine Biology and a Ph.D. in Biological Oceanography. Her research interests include coastal, estuarine, and riverine water quality and fate and transport modeling of contaminants including pathogens, fecal indicators, and micropollutants. She is interested in both natural and engineered systems, with an emphasis on sustainable, green engineering designs with a biological component. She has 17 publications and submitted manuscripts and has given 17 invited presentations.
Rodrigo Sarlo / STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING AND MATERIALS
Rodrigo Sarlo is joining as an Assistant Professor after earning his B.S. in mechanical engineering from the University of Virginia and an M.S. and Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering from Virginia Tech. His research interests include resilient infrastructure and smart cities, instrumentation and sensing, machine learning internet of things, vibrations and dynamics, and modal analysis. He worked in the Virginia Tech Smart Infrastructure Laboratory doing automated smart infrastructure monitoring. In this role, he performed system identification of a multi-story smart building using a network of 225 accelerometers relying only on ambient excitation such as wind and human activity. He also conducted research in human-structure interaction in violin acoustics in the VT Vibration and Adaptive Structures and Testing Lab, and multi-functional Biomaterials research in the Biomolecular Materials and Systems lab.
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Jesus M. de la Garza, the Vecellio Professor of Construction Engineering and Management, finished 30 amazing and fulfilling years of service at Virginia Tech. From now on, he will receive free parking! He chaired the Research Working Group within the Intelligent Infrastructure for Human Centered Communities’ Destination [for talent] Area. He continued his role as the Academic Advisor to the Construction Industry Institute’s Manufacturing and Life Sciences Sector. de la Garza is now on his eighth year as Editor-in-Chief for ASCE’s Journal of Construction Engineering and Management and also serves on ASCE Construction Institute’s Awards Committee.
Michael J. Garvin took a research leave in the fall semester. He collaborated with professors Ray Levitt and Dick Scott of Stanford University to secure a contract with Edward Elgar Publishers to publish a book about public-private partnerships (PPPs) in 2019. Additionally, he submitted five journal papers; two were accepted and three are under revision. He also spoke about PPPs by invitation at Cornell University and the University of Limerick in Ireland. Mike returned in the spring semester to his normal duties. He continues to provide advisory services to the Build America Initiative for the Federal Highway Administration.
Farrokh Jazizadeh’s research is at the intersection of civil infrastructure management and data science on adaptive environments, human-centered communities, and infrastructure operational analytics. He has been active with multiple projects on human thermal demand assessment for adaptive buildings, artificial-intelligence control algorithms for building systems, urban scale energy management as well as participatory sensing for sustainable urban mobility. He has received funding from National Science Foundation, VT ICTAS, VT BioBuild, SAE International, and the Association of American Railroads. He has authored multiple journal publications and actively involved in different conferences including ASCE International Workshop on Computing in Civil Engineering (IWCCE), ASCE Construction Research Congress, and
PROGRAM AREAS
The prominence and
visibility of the Vecellio
Construction Engineering
and Management Program
(VCEMP) continues to
expand. The 2018 Vecellio
Distinguished Lecture will be
presented by Wayne A. Crew,
P.E., the General Secretary
of the National Academy
of Construction. Seven
undergraduate Vecellio
Scholarships and one
Graduate Vecellio Fellowship
were awarded to highly-
qualified students who have
demonstrated leadership
potential and an interest
in pursuing a career in the
construction industry. These
students who were formally
recognized during the
proceedings of the Vecellio
Distinguished Lecture are:
Sydney Greenspan, Rebecca
King, Danielle Lehman,
Daniel Szalecki, Lucy Travers,
Aleia Warren, Robert Witte,
and Brooke Baugher.
Additional VCEMP highlights
during this year included:
Jolley, Director of Project
Management at ACS
Infrastructure Development,
as Outstanding VCEMP
Alumnus.
Williams, VDOT’s Salem
District Construction
Engineer, as Outstanding
VCEMP Alumnus.
Baugher as Outstanding
VCEMP MS student and
Diana M. Franco-Duran as
Outstanding VCEMP Ph.D.
student.
Construction Management
Association of America
Scholarships to Sogand
Hasanzadeh and Diana M.
Franco-Duran from CMAA’s
National Capital Chapter.
CONSTRUCTION ENGINEERING AND MANAGEMENT
Assistant Professor Farrokh Jazizadeh and Ph.D. student Wooyoung Jung in the lab.
ACM BuildSys and eEnergy.
Freddy Paige had an eventful year becoming the Assistant Director of the Virginia Center for Housing Research (VCHR). In his new role, Paige collaborated on a project with Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to update strategies for federal agencies to improve housing innovation. A stakeholders meeting with over 50 representatives from across the housing industry provided HUD with critical insights into the current state of the housing industry. His HUD project ended with a group meeting with Secretary Ben Carson, and opportunities for the VCHR to continue their state and national contribution to improving the affordability, sustainability, and quality of housing. Paige also was awarded an ICTAS REU Site grant where he mentored eight undergraduate student researchers, enhancing their research skills and understanding of research opportunities post-graduation. The newly formed STILE research group has presented their work at the Construction Research Congress, Residential Building Design and Construction Conference, and ASHRAE
Winter Conference.
Tripp Shealy was awarded the G.V. Loganathan Teaching Award in 2017. This award is given to one faculty member a year and is awarded by students in the department. Dr. Shealy also developed a new course titled, Human Behavior and Infrastructure Systems, where students learn to apply behavioral science to enhance their engineering designs. He also published multiple case-studies teaching how concepts from behavioral science can improve engineering decision-making that involves risk and uncertainty. The modules follow a Harvard Business School format where students are given a real-world case and devise a solution before learning how the professional team solved the problem. Dr. Shealy continued his work on two NSF sponsored projects studying decision biases during the construction process and investigating students’ beliefs about climate change.
Sunil Sinha had a very productive year in teaching, research, scholarship, and service. He taught the graduate course “Information
The 2018 Vecellio Distinguished Lecture to be presented by Wayne A. Crew,
P.E., General Secretary of the National Academy of Construction.
Prior to his current position, he was the director of the Construction Industry Institute (CII), the renowned research institute
based at The University of Texas at Austin. He has over 45 years of experience in the engineering and construction industry, and
has worked for both owner and contractor firms as well as in research. Early in his career, he served in project management and
engineering positions for two large owner companies, Amoco Chemical Corporation
and Michigan Chemical Corporation. Later he served in executive positions at
engineering and construction giants Technip USA and KBR. His roles in research
included serving as director of research at CII and then as director of CII. He holds a
bachelor’s degree in civil engineering from Michigan State University and an MBA from
the University of Houston. He is active in the ACE Mentor Program, serving on both
the group’s national board of directors and the Austin, TX, board of directors. He also
has served in many capacities in his church and with the Boy Scouts of America. Wayne
has a keen interest in improving the engineering and construction industry through
development and implementation of best practices. Working with Virginia Tech faculty
in the aftermath of the tragic 2007 campus shooting there, he created a graduate
best practices class taught by industry lecturers and practitioners. That course is now
offered to the industry at large through CII. Wayne has been married to Rivanna for over
40 years. They have two children and two grandchildren. He is a recreational bike rider,
twice completing the Register’s Annual Great Bicycle Ride Across Iowa (RAGBRAI) the
world’s largest bike-touring event. He and Rivanna enjoy playing with the grandkids
and an occasional round of golf. During the 2018 Vecellio Lecture, he will speak about
the research based best practices of Zero Safety Incidents and Front End Planning.
The Zero Safety Incident discussion included a specific look at the need for enhanced efforts to prevent low frequency but high
impact events (fatalities) in capital projects.
Technology for Infrastructure” in Fall 2017 and “Infrastructure Asset Management” in the Spring Semester 2018. Sunil Sinha leads efforts to develop national water pipeline database. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation has funded a five-year study, led by Virginia Tech. The researchers will collect high-quality field performance data on reliability for water pipelines of different materials, including cast iron, ductile iron, reinforced concrete, steel, lead, plastic, thermoplastic, and others. This study will include analyses of the economics, cost-effectiveness, and life-cycle costs associated with the various water pipe materials under evaluation. Sinha will work to develop a national database, named PIPEiD, otherwise known as Pipeline Infrastructure Database that will be capable of efficiently and securely storing the collected data. Sinha serves as vice-chair of NIST Community Resilience Standing Committee for water and wastewater and he is chair of ASCE Asset Management Division.
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The Transportation Construction Management Institute (TCMI) just celebrated its 30-year anniversary.
TCMI was designed as an intensive, full-time development program for middle and upper level personnel in management positions. The workload is high and attendees are expected to give their total commitment to the program.
The institute grew out of a number of discussions between representatives of Virginia Tech, the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT), and the Virginia Transportation Construction Alliance (VTCA).
TCMI was the creation of Michael C. Vorster, the David Burrows Professor Emeritus, and Richard F. Harshberger. Both saw a need to provide a management development program tailored to the needs of transportation construction professionals to help them meet the demands of the Commonwealth’s new initiatives in transportation.
TCMI is designed for 30 individuals, 15 coming from VDOT
and 15 representing VTCA. Vorster and Harshberger led the effort until Vorster’s retirement in 2010.
Jesus M. de la Garza, the Vecellio Professor of Construction Engineering and Management, who coincidentally also just completed 30 years of service at Virginia Tech, has been involved with TCMI for those 30 years as an instructor and as a co-director since 2010.
More than 900 graduates have gone through the program and have contributed to the better interests of all Virginians. By working together, these TCMI alumni have completed projects in a more cost-effective and competitive manner, applied newly acquired management and interpersonal skills to areas of increased responsibility and authority, and have adopted a positive team approach with their counterparts in the industry.
A powerful and highly beneficial by-product of the TCMI Outreach initiative has been the creation of CHAMPS (Center for Highway Asset Management Programs).
In the late 1990s, one of the VDOT delegates asked de la Garza if he was staying for dinner because he wanted to discuss an idea and wanted to hear de la Garza’s input. The discussion about VDOT’s newly implemented performance-based highway maintenance contracting strategy led to the creation of a multi-year and multimillion dollar research activity, housed within CHAMPS. CHAMPS has produced doctoral and masters students, research experiences for undergraduates, and scholarly publications.
TCMI, which was originally founded for outreach, has led to numerous research and scholarship opportunities.
“There have been many connections to research that have been afforded by the networking that TCMI has enabled,” noted de la Garza.
VDOT’s and VTCA’s leadership has been instrumental in funding TCMI for the last 30 years and brings significant value to the way in which the highway infrastructure is procured, designed, built, and maintained.
de la Garza contributes to 30 years of management development
Jesus M. de la Garza, who just
completed 30 years of service
at Virginia Tech, has been
involved with TCMI for 30 years
as an instructor and as a co-
director since 2010.
With researchers in Spain, Andrea M. Dietrich published novel research improving desalinated drinking water quality for consumers. She traveled extensively in China lecturing at three universities and enjoying colleagues, history, and food. In Virginia, she collaborated with faculty, students, citizens, agencies, and businesses on the first comprehensive investigation of Dan River water quality since the 39,000 tons coal ash spill. Her research group advanced the understanding of how aerosolized contaminated water leads to potential adverse health effects when inhaled by humans. This year Dr. Dietrich celebrated 30 years of teaching, research, and outreach at Virginia Tech and was rewarded free parking… it was worth the wait!
Randy Dymond teaches and performs research in the areas of urban stormwater and land development. He has active stormwater research projects with Blacksburg, Roanoke, NSF, and Fairfax County. During the past year, Randy graduated eight MS students and one PhD, has had three conference and six journal papers published, with one more accepted for publication and another 11 papers under review. He was honored to become a Fellow of ASCE and a Diplomate of American Academy of Water Resources Engineers. In addition, the Land Development Design Initiative (LDDI) continues to grow with 45 sponsoring companies last year; more information is available at www.lddi.cee.vt.edu.
Marc Edwards won numerous honors in 2018 including the Scientific Freedom and Responsibility award from the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), Visionary of the Year from the League of Wisconsin Voters, and an honorary PhD from Clarkson University. As Principle Investigator in collaboration with Dr. Kelsey Pieper, Louisiana State University (LSU), North Carolina State University (NCSU), Edwards won a three year grant for $2 million dollars from the Environmental Protection Agency to improve consumer responses to lead in drinking water. With Amy Pruden, Edwards continued to lead research into infrastructure inequality nationally, emphasizing assistance on consumers
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCES
The Environmental and Water Resources (EWR) Program continues to be one of the most respected graduate programs in environmental engineering in the U.S., according to the rankings published annually by U.S. News and World Report. In 2018 the EWR Program moved up to a tie for #6 among graduate U.S. programs. Continuing to rank among the best graduate environmental engineering programs reflects the dedicated work of the EWR faculty, staff and students.
The EWR program continues to receive exemplary service and support from our staff members who are located in both Blacksburg and Northern Virginia. We are likewise blessed to have had staff members who have provided dedicated service in the program for many, many years. Julie Petruska retired from the program at the end of spring semester, having provided superb service to Virginia Tech as a whole for 40 years and 33 years of dedicated work in overseeing our EWR laboratories and research efforts here on campus. Julie’s career with us touched the lives and research work of probably 800 to 1000 students in EWR over her many years with us. Many of our program’s alumni have acknowledged Julie’s fine help in the Acknowledgement section of their thesis or dissertation. We wish Julie all the best in retirement! A.J. Prussin has been hired to assume Julie’s leadership role in the EWR program. Welcome aboard to A.J.!
Beth Lucas continues her excellent work as the primary administrative support person to the EWR program’s faculty and students. Likewise, Debbie Cooper provides very useful administrative support to several EWR faculty members who are located in Patton Hall. Jody Smiley continues to provide high-quality guidance to through research work of our
program, focusing on the more advanced analytical needs of our faculty and students. Congratulations go to Jody as she has reached her 20-year anniversary with the program!
Fifteen EWR staff and faculty, four masters and five PhD students, are at the Occoquan Laboratory, located in Manassas, Virginia, and established in 1972. The lab is dedicated entirely to sponsored research in all areas of water quality. The commercially-accredited environmental laboratory staff is led by Dongmei Alvi, with staffers Joan Wirt, Curt Eskridge, Alex Clare, and Kyle Grizzard. The field operations are led by Harry Post, ably assisted by Doug Holladay and Mark Lucas. Barbara Angelotti, and her staff of Alicia Tingen and Marilyn Stull, are responsible for office operations and much more, while Jeanie Taylor is the building custodian. Faculty members “Zhiwu” Drew Wang and Adil Godrej will soon be joined by Stanley Grant and Megan Rippy, both coming to us from the University of California at Irvine. Field staffer George “Woody” Underwood retired after nearly 39 years, and was one of the winners of the 2018 Staff Career Achievement Awards. On May 4, 2018, the Lab hosted the first Thomas J. Grizzard, Jr., research symposium in memory of the former long-time director’s career. The Symposium was sponsored by Fairfax Water, Fairfax County Department of Public Works and Environmental Services, the Upper Occoquan Service Authority, and Virginia Tech’s Charles E. Via, Jr., Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.
The following paragraphs provide information on the ongoing activities and recent accomplishments of the many faculty members who are part of the EWR Program.
PROGRAM AREAS
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on water quality. He was on sabbatical this year supported by a Fulbright Scholarship to research the effect of floodplain restoration on water quality in Taiwan. He also continued to lead projects supported by the National Science Foundation and the Office of Surface Mines to study preferential flow and natural attenuation of contaminants in riverbeds, riverbanks, and mining areas. He serves as associate editor for Water Resources Research, and on the Board of Directors of the Consortium of Universities for Advancement of Hydrologic Science (CUAHSI).
Clayton Hodges continues his work to understand and mitigate the impacts of urban stormwater runoff to help protect and restore our streams and rivers. During the past year, Dr. Hodges’ research has been focused on understanding the deficiencies in construction and maintenance of green stormwater infrastructure, aiding in the development of erosion risk mapping procedures, and in developing tools for municipalities to more effectively catalogue and track maintenance issues for stormwater best management practices.
Jennifer L. Irish continued coastal hazards research, focusing on the physics of and risk posed by coastal floods and measures to manage these risks. Irish authored seven journal papers on topics including probabilistic surge hazard assessment. Irish serves on the National Academies committee on long-term coastal change, ASCE’s Committee on Technical Advancement, and ASCE’s Coastal Engineering Research Council. She is co-organizer of the 2018 VASEM Summit on Securing Prosperity in the Coastal Zone. She continues to serve on the editorial boards of Coastal Engineering and the Journal of Waterway, Port, Coastal, and Ocean Engineering-ASCE.
Gabriel Isaacman-VanWertz has been developing new tools and techniques to analyze the composition to study of organic gases and particles and understand their roles in the formation of air pollution. His NOAA- and DOE-supported work will expand the impact of atmospheric research and for the first time allow atmospheric monitoring sites to easily measure the composition of particulate matter. His collaboration with Mark Widdowson studying vapors from underground home
water quality problems, in cities and towns that are struggling financially.
Dan Gallagher actively pursued interdisciplinary risk-related research for water and food safety. He, with colleagues at 18 other institutions, are preventing pathogenic E. coli contamination through a $25 million USDA grant. He serves on the Executive Management Team, which received the Mission Integration of Research, Education, and Extension Award by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture. He traveled in China to present on statistical and data analysis for water utilities. Together with colleagues in CEE and CSES, he conducted research and outreach to water utilities in Virginia. He and students presented at the Society for Risk Analysis, the International Association for Food Protection, the American Water Resources Association, and the American Water Works Association conferences.
Adil Godrej’s research during the last year was a continuation of that in previous years. During the last few months, fairly major changes were negotiated in the long-term monitoring program on the Potomac River, and these will be implemented in 2019. Godrej is
looking forward to the arrival of new research partners with the addition of two new faculty, one of whom will be the new Associate Director of the Occoquan Lab. Godrej has recently finished his first year as Director.
Zhen (Jason) He has had a productive year with publishing 30 journal papers and graduating four PhD and seven MS students. He delivered invited seminars at Northwestern University, Clemson University, and University of Toronto. He was selected to receive a 2018 Walter L. Huber Civil Engineering Research Prize by ASCE. He was recognized as an Outstanding Reviewer for the second time by Environmental Science: Water Research & Technology and also joined its Advisory Board. He became an Associate Editor for Science of the Total Environment and Journal of Environmental Engineering, and a member of Editorial Board of Chemical Engineering Journal.
Erich Hester’s research focuses on how human actions in watersheds interact with stream, river, and wetland hydraulics to affect aquatic ecological health and water quality. A core research theme is the effect of stream restoration and river management practices
Professors Andrea Dietrich and Daniel Gallagher celebrating a successful research and graduations with students.
PROGRAM AREAS
Linsey Marr spent the past year on sabbatical as a Fulbright Scholar in Taipei. As a visiting researcher in the College of Public Health at National Taiwan University, she modeled the potential for long-distance transport of the flu virus through the atmosphere from mainland China to Taiwan. She gave seminars at the University of Hong Kong, National Taiwan University, and National Yang Ming University and attended two conferences in Taiwan. Over the summer, she spoke at the Gordon Research Conference on Microbiology of the Built Environment in Maine and gave a plenary talk at the Indoor Air Conference in Philadelphia.
Amy Pruden is busy with Peter Vikesland continuing to send students abroad and foster international collaboration towards tackling the spread of antimicrobial resistance through their National Science Foundation Partnership in International Research and Education (PIRE) project. She also continued her work tracking antibiotic resistance from farm to fork with her USDA team and is working with collaborators in Computer Science to develop bioinformatic tools for environmental monitoring of antibiotic resistance. Her collaboration with Marc Edwards continues, working towards identifying plumbing designs and strategies that employ knowledge of the microbiome to prevent the colonization of pathogens, while also bringing these tools to underserved communities on well water and to aid in disaster response, including a student trip to Puerto Rico to study recovery of water systems from Hurricane Maria.
Paolo Scardina had another productive year of instructing civil engineering undergraduates. Paolo was the recipient of the Academic Integrity and Excellence Award offered by the VT Office of Undergraduate Academic Integrity (i.e. Honor System). Paolo manages the civil engineering hydraulics teaching laboratory, which is used extensively with approximately 200 students each semester cycling through this instructional laboratory. Paolo also continues to advise the VT Chapter of ASCE and offers support to the competition teams Steel Bridge and Concrete Canoe.
Assistant Professor of Practice Paolo Scardina does a demonstration in the water lab in Patton Hall.
heating oil spills has yielded important results about the impacts of spills. His publications in top journals have provided new insights into fundamental atmospheric chemistry, as well as shifts in understanding of pollution in major cities like Los Angeles.
Bill Knocke completed his 40th year as a member of the EWR program during 2018. He is currently the longest-term faculty member in the CEE Department in terms of continuous years of service at VT. Dr. Knocke stepped down as EWR Program Coordinator in August after five years of service in this administrative leadership role in the program. He continues as the faculty advisor to all CEE distance learning students who are enrolled in MS degree programs. He also continues to lead the Program Development Institute program for VT which is a cohort training program for 30-40 new VT faculty members each year as they seek to initiate the research and scholarly programs on campus. His main research area is still related to iron and manganese control in drinking water treatment. During the year Dr. Knocke presented two research papers on manganese control at technical conferences. He
continues to work to translate the research on manganese control done at Virginia Tech into new design practices for the water industry.
John Little continues to focus on developing a system-of-systems approach to sustainability and resilience. In this regard, he was invited to serve as a member of the stakeholder committee for the Global Systems Science (GSS) Destination Area, and received funding to develop a Concept Area on Systems Integration within GSS. John used this funding to host a workshop on Systems Integration for Global Systems Science with leading experts in the areas of integrated assessment and modeling (Tony Jakeman) and systems science (Sondoss Elsawah) invited to help lead the workshop. Tony Jakeman is the Honorary Editor in Chief of Environmental Modelling and Software (EMS), which is generally considered to be the top journal on computational frameworks and integrated assessment, and Founding Editor in Chief of a new journal on Socio-Environmental Systems Modeling (SESMO), which focuses on integrating models of social systems with those of ecological systems. John was invited to serve on the Editorial Board of SESMO.
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Kyle Strom leads the Fluid and Sediment Dynamics research group, which focuses on landscape dynamics and improving our understanding and ability to model the movement of water and sediment in rivers, estuaries, and the ocean. Much of their work is carried out in the Baker Environmental Hydraulics Laboratory. The group started a new project this year which aims at improving predictions of ancient ocean current speed from mud deposits. Other topics the lab was engaged in include: the development of new laboratory and field equipment, the trapping of waterborne muddy sediment within riverbeds, the transfer of momentum between fluid vortices and sediment, the interaction of submarine flows and deposits, and the movement of mud in the Chesapeake Bay. Over the past year, Kyle and his colleagues have published journal papers and given talks on these topics. Kyle taught graduate courses in sediment transport, fluid mechanics, and open channel flow this past year and served as an associate editor of the Journal of Hydraulic Engineering.
Peter Vikesland returned from a six month sabbatical at ETH Zurich in early January and in the intervening months has settled back into teaching his course Fundamentals of Public Health Engineering and directing his research group. Over the past year, he has had three PhD students and one MS student complete their graduate studies. Working with Linsey Marr and her students, he initiated research to investigate the interesting properties of aerosolized water droplets and he continues working with Amy Pruden to develop sustainable approaches to mitigate the spread of antibiotic resistance. He serves as the Editor-in-Chief of the journal Environmental Science: Nano and is the current EWR Program Coordinator.
Zhiwu (Drew) Wang’s group has published five journal papers, graduated one MS students, and recruited the first black student of the Occoquan Lab during the past year. He started multiple new projects on the research of aerobic granulation, anammox granules, enhanced phosphorus removal, biofiltration modeling, and thermal hydrolysis pretreatment in collaboration with five municipal utilities. His joint-effort with researchers in the Department of Food Science & Technology as well as the
George Washington University was supported by a new USDA grant for enabling high-rate production of value-added bioproducts from food wastes by using novel pure-culture biogranulation technique. His pioneer research harnessing fungi for stormwater and animal manure treatment was also funded by Virginia Agricultural Council and Virginia 4VA. He also developed and delivered the first EWR asynchronized online undergraduate course CEE 3104 Introduction to Environmental Engineering, along with the other two synchronized online courses he taught in the past year.
Claire White continues to have a diverse teaching schedule, splitting time between CEE and Virginia Tech’s Program in Real Estate. During the past academic year, Claire taught three sections of CEE 2824 – Civil Engineering Drawings and CAD, two sections of CEE 3274 – Intro. to Land Development, one section of CEE 4804 - Professional and Legal Issues, and two sections of REAL 3024 – Applied Real Estate Development. She also served as a CEE undergraduate advisor. Additionally, in conjunction with Dewberry, Claire developed
a new textbook as part of the Land Development Handbook series, scheduled for publication in 2019.
Mark Widdowson teamed with Gabriel Issacman-VanWertz on an extensive study of vapor intrusion risks and impacts to domestic well water quality due to petroleum spills in Virginia. Their findings will serve as a basis for the formulation of policy by the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality. Widdowson continued his involvement with the Hampton Roads
Sanitation District’s Sustainable Water Initiative for Tomorrow (SWIFT) project. He served on two working groups of the Interstate Technology and Regulatory Council; one on the emerging contaminant group of compounds known as PFAS and one on risk evaluation at petroleum-contaminated sites. Widdowson continues his administrative role as Assistant Department Head and Graduate Chair.
Kevin Young continues to maintain a busy teaching schedule, while also serving as Assistant Coordinator of the Land Development Design Initiative (lddi.cee.vt.edu) and advising the Sustainable Land Development Club (SLDC). During the past academic year, Kevin taught two sections of CEE 2814 – Civil & Environmental Engineering Measurements, two sections of CEE 3274 – Intro. To Land Development Design, and one section of CEE 4274 – Land Development Design.
Assistant Professor of Practice Kevin Young received a Certificate of Teaching Excellence.
PROGRAM AREAS
Air pollution is responsible for seven million premature deaths per year. Linsey Marr, professor of environmental and water resources engineering, is seeking to change that trend.
Her research focuses on emissions, transformation, fate, and effects of air pollutants such as ozone and airborne particles to provide the scientific basis for improving air quality and health. Marr is also addressing concerns about engineered nanomaterials in the atmosphere.
So what are nanoparticles? Nanoparticles are materials smaller than 100 nanometers (about 1000 times smaller than the width of a human hair), and nanotechnology is the application of these materials for the development of new products such
as drug delivery devices, thin solar cells, and sensors for environmental toxins.
These nanoparticles can be released into the air during manufacturing, use, or disposal of products and can be transported vast distances in the atmosphere. However, the health and environmental impacts of engineered nanomaterials are still somewhat unknown and inhalation exposure can be concerning.
Marr hopes to find out more about the release, transformation, fate, and toxicity of nanomaterials in the atmosphere. One challenge is finding a way to study the behavior of nanomaterials under realistic conditions in the environment, in terms of the chemical composition of air, water, and soil.
Marr’s research also dives into
the airborne transmission of infectious disease such as the flu because the virus that causes it behaves like nanoparticles in air. Her interest in this topic grew out of frustration with the high frequency that her young children were catching infectious diseases from their peers at daycare.
The same tools and concepts she used to study engineered nanomaterials in the atmosphere also apply to viruses.
Marr has been especially interested in the seasonality of the flu, why it happens during the wintertime. She has studied it in a lab and in a daycare setting.
Initial results showed that the flu virus survived best when the relative humidity was either close to 100 percent, like when it’s rainy outside, or below 50 percent, like when we
heat indoor air in the wintertime, but results in more realistic droplets show that the virus survives well across a wide range of humidities.
She is looking into different ways that humidity the flu virus, and the story is continuing to unfold.
Marr spent the last year in Taiwan on a Fulbright fellowship to examine whether the flu can be transmitted through the atmosphere over distances of hundreds of kilometers or more.
She worked with colleagues from National Taiwan University to estimate the amount of flu virus released from neighboring countries, such as China, and then to use an atmospheric transport model to predict how much would reach Taiwan.
Her ultimate goal is to bridge public health and engineering to produce new insight into how the flu spreads.
Marr bridges engineering and public health
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Half of the world’s population lives on or near the coast and can be affected by flooding due to coastal storms, such as hurricanes, and tsunamis.
These natural disasters can devastate communities, claim lives, and destroy sites of archaeological, cultural, and socioeconomic importance. In fact, extreme coastal floods can weaken the national and global economy and security.
Jennifer Irish, along with Robert Weiss in the Department of Geosciences at Virginia Tech, lead the coastal hazards research team at Virginia Tech which aims to alleviate some of these problems.
The group includes 45 faculty from 13 departments from all colleges across campus, studies the physics of inundation and sediment transport, as well as quantitative hazard assessment and hazard mitigation by natural features such as wetlands, coastal forest, and dunes.
There is also a new graduate
program in Disaster Resilience and Risk Management to further studies in this area.
The research group has four main research themes of disaster resilience, hazard assessment, process sedimentology, and natural infrastructure. Their focus is to reduce potential coastal hazards by identifying and understanding the interplay between population, economy, industry, infrastructure, and the environment.
The goal is to improve reliability of coastal hazard assessments and the overall understanding of the role that vegetation and beaches play in coastal hazard mitigation.
Irish has a research passion in coastal hazards, which led her not only to lead the Coastal Hazards at Virginia Tech group, but also to study the advancement of storm surge hazard assessment.
Sea levels have risen globally at a rate of 1.7mm/year over the last century and are projected to continue
to rise at a rapid rate. This threatens low-lying, narrow barrier islands.
While slight increases in protection can be offered, the greatest protection would be to raise the entire island, a feat that is not easily accomplished.
In another recent study of Barnegat Bay in New Jersey, Irish found that the timing and magnitude of bay storm surge relative to ocean surge were critically important for determining damage on developed barrier islands during hurricanes.
By shifting bay-surge timing, island erosion
was significantly reduced, up to 130%, in areas where the majority of coastal infratructure was on the island.
While the majority of Irish’s research focuses on storm surge hazard assessment, she was recently awarded a prestigious Fulbright fellowship that will allow her to aim to find ways to minimize the damage caused by tsunamis.
In her project, titled “Probabilistic Tsunami Hazard Assessment in the Context of Sustaining Israel’s Archeological Sites and Coastal Infrastructure,” she will seek to quantitatively characterize the danger tsunamis pose to the sustainability of ancient sites, modern infrastructure, and community prosperity in Israel.
This would be able to help preserve sites of archaeological and cultural significance and could be applied to tsunami forecasting to support early warning and evacuation.
Ultimately, the goal of this is to have a “more complete understanding of coastal hazard that will ultimately lead to more disaster resilient coasts,” said Irish.
Irish seeks to minimize coastal disasters
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GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERING
Tom Brandon is leading a team to develop a revised edition of the legacy manual NAVFAC 7.01 Soil Mechanics. The development team spans three universities and private consultants. The 30+ year old manual was once solely the domain of the Navy, but the revision will be addressing the needs of the Army and Air Force as well. The effort is scheduled to take two years.
Brandon and Castellanos have been active in the laboratory, conducting geotechnical tests for a variety of government and private organizations. The laboratory has had large projects testing the fully softened shear strength of fine-grained soils, as well as numerous tests of the engineering properties of coal combustion products.
Brandon has been involved as a consultant on several projects, including a 14-mile long ring dike in Texas, as well as a continuing involvement in the slope failure at the Chuck Yeager International Airport in Charleston, West Virginia.
Joe Dove continued his interdisciplinary research collaborations with faculty and students and is heavily involved in the undergraduate curriculum.
His research includes studies to improve the engineering properties of fine-grained soils, detect voids in the subsurface using geophysical methods, and a study on
The Geotechnical Engineering Program enjoyed another successful year in research, teaching, and service missions. Highlights include:� Nina Stark received both an NSF CAREER Award and a Young Investigator Award from
the Office of Naval Research.� Adrian Rodriguez-Marek serves as co-chair of the Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering
and Soil Dynamics Conference in Austin, Texas. This conference is held once every ten years and bring together the top researchers in the field of geotechnical engineering.
� Russell Green was awarded the Whakapukahatanga Taiao Research Fellowship from the University of Auckland (New Zealand) and the 2018 CEE Alumni Teaching Excellence Award.
� Virginia Tech becomes a new associate member of the international Anura3D MPM research community. Alba Yerro Colom leads our involvement.
Every year, our graduate students enhance their professional development by attending national ASCE Geo-Institute conferences. The Duncan Endowment for Graduate Student Travel provides financial support to help make this travel possible. More information about the endowment and ways to contribute can be found at cee.vt.edu/duncan-endowment.
construction-induced ground vibrations.He served as program area coordinator
over the past year for the geotechnical engineering program. He began serving the department as the director of curriculum and assessment and is now actively preparing for the department’s upcoming ABET accreditation review.
He also continues to serve on the academic advising team for undergraduate majors, and as the chair of the curriculum committee.
Emeritus Distinguished Professor Mike Duncan worked with George Filz as co-director of Virginia Tech ’s Center for Geotechnical Practice and Research (CGPR), and he supervised graduate students on research projects supported by the CGPR and CEE department.
During the past year, he served on the design review board of a new off-channel reservoir on the Lower Colorado River in Texas, and he provided design guidance for power line support structures in California for Pacific Gas & Electric Company.
Duncan continues to support geotechnical engineering graduate students in attending Geo-Institute conferences, with the generous assistance of friends and colleagues.
George Filz continues his research on a variety of topics, including braced excavation support and construction working platforms.
Filz continues to serve as co-director of the CGPR, faculty advisor of Virginia Tech’s Geotechnical Student Organization, member of VDOT’s Geotechnical Research Advisory Committee, member of the ASCE Geo-Institute Soil Improvement Committee, and consultant on geotechnical design and construction projects, particularly on improvements to dams, levees, and other infrastructure systems.
Russell Green is continuing his work
studying the geotechnical aspects of earthquakes in New Zealand. As a result of his work on the New Zealand earthquakes, Green was awarded the Whakapukahatanga Taiao Research Fellowship from the University of Auckland.
Green is also involved in two projects in Iceland, assessing the seismic hazard of northeast Iceland and the influence of engineered fill on the dynamic response of structures.
He is continuing his work on two NSF-sponsored projects and two USGS-sponsored projects, related to various aspects of natural and induced seismicity; three of these projects are in collaboration with Adrian Rodriguez-Marek.
Green is an associate editor/editorial board member for two major journals and is a guest Russell Green accepting the Alumni Teaching
Excellence Award.
PROGRAM AREAS
associate editor for a third journal.He is also serving on the American
Nuclear Society (ANS) committee that is re-writing ANS 2.29 standard on PSHA for nuclear facilities.
In May, Green was awarded the 2018 CEE Alumni Teaching Excellence Award.
Matthew Mauldon teaches courses in geotechnical engineering, geological engineering and engineering rock mechanics.
This past year, he has started an investigation of geomechanical properties of the Hokie stone used to clad buildings on campus.
Mauldon has also begun work with Tom Brandon on a major revision to the engineering-geologic sections of the Naval Facilities Soil Mechanics Design Manual.
Adrian Rodriguez-Marek has spent the last academic year on sabbatical as a visiting professor in the Politecnico di Torino, in Italy, and working with various universities in Bolivia.
In Italy, he has collaborated with various colleagues on issues related to site effects and site characterization using stochastic methods.
He continues to collaborate with Russell Green on NSF-funded research focused on the development of an energy-based methodology for liquefaction assessment, and with various faculty in the CEE department on a multi-disciplinary project on Resilient and Sustainable Building Systems funded by NSF.
Rodriguez-Marek serves as the chairman of the Earthquake Engineering and Soil Dynamics committee of the Geo-Institute of ASCE and is an editorial board member for the journals Earthquake Spectra, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, and the Journal of Geotechnical and GeoEnvironmental Engineering.
Emeritus University Distinguished Professor Jim Mitchell serves as a member of the National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine (NASEM) Committee on Geological and Geotechnical Engineering (COGGE), and as a member of the Science Advisory Board for the NSF-sponsored Engineering Research Center for Bio-mediated
and Bio-inspired Geotechnics, comprised of four universities (Arizona State, UC Davis, New Mexico State and Georgia Tech).
Mitchell is co-editing, along with Ning Lu of the Colorado School of Mines, Geotechnical Fundamentals for Addressing New World Challenges, to be published in 2018. This book will contain chapters focusing on important geotechnical problems identified and discussed by participants in a National Science Foundation sponsored workshop held in 2016.
Nina Stark continued the development of a novel mobile sediment sampler funded by NSF. Two samplers have been successfully tested in the lab and under different field conditions.
She also continued her work on the rapid assessment of beach trafficability from remote sensing for ONR. This year, this work focused on determining friction angles and moisture content from optic and radar imagery.
Stark was awarded the NSF CAREER award and the Young Investigator Award by the Office of Naval Research.
She led two teams for the Geotechnical Extreme Events Reconnaissance Association during hurricane reconnaissance efforts.
Alba Yerro Colom began a project funded by Geopier Foundation Company to investigate the performance of Rammed Aggregate Piers (RAP) elements under the effect of dynamic loading.
This research was motivated by the 2010-2011 Canterbury Earthquake Sequence in Christchurch that resulted in a widespread liquefaction, and data
from subsequent soil improvement programs preformed in the area is accounted to prevent the recurrence of similar catastrophes.
With the leadership of Yerro Colom, Virginia Tech is an associate member of the Anura3D MPM Research Community since September 2017. This corporation is currently formed by nine partners from Europe and the U.S. with the common goal of developing an advanced numerical software, based on the Material Point Method, for the modeling of large deformations and soil-water-structure interaction problems.
Yerro Colom continued her research on the study of large deformation problems in geotechnics such as slope failures, collapses in underground excavations, and soil-structure-water interaction problems.
She is also focused on the study of aeolian surface erosion in sand dunes.
Yerro Colom is developing two new graduate courses titled “Numerical Methods in Geotechnics” and “Modelling with MPM” which will provide extensive and in-depth knowledge of numerical modeling in geotechnics.
Geotechnical engineering students do a demonstration at the CEE showcase.
PROGRAM AREAS
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Finley Charney continues to work in the area of seismic and wind engineering.
Most recently, he has increased his activities in wind engineering, and in doing so is actively involved in the update of the wind load provisions of ASCE 7 (for ASCE 7-22).
Much of his activity in wind engineering is related to developing new procedures for performance based wind design, and specifically understanding the behavior under extreme winds where it might be possible for the lateral load resisting system to exhibit some inelastic behavior.
Charney is chairing an ASCE Wind Division task committee that is exploring this issue, and is co-author for the analysis chapter in an upcoming ASCE pre-standard for performance based wind engineering.
Matthew Eatherton and his research group have continued their focus on developing new structural systems with enhanced earthquake performance and improving resilience and sustainability of structural systems.
The group is working on several ongoing multi-year projects including a multi-university collaborative project on seismic behavior of steel deck diaphragms, an NSF CAREER project related to high ductility
steel shear panels, a collaborative project on optimizing resilience and sustainability of building systems, a collaborative project working on computational simulation of steel fracture in structures, and a project developing new bolted end plate moment connections for metal buildings.
Eatherton’s research group is active in outreach activities and professional service, such as hosting learning activities at several outreach events including C-Tech^2, Blast summer camp, Engineering Open House, and others.
Eatherton is a member of five professional committees and has authored design examples to be used by practicing structural engineers.
Madeleine Flint’s research activities continue to focus on the design of resilient, sustainable, and durable structures. Active projects include: a multi-disciplinary NSF-funded collaboration developing a decision support system for multi-hazard building design; a collaboration between Virginia Tech, Stanford University, and Oak Ridge National Laboratory investigating the impacts of climate change on bridge collapse rates; and a newly-awarded collaboration with the Technical University of Denmark that will develop methods to translate climate model predictions
to site-specific meteorological boundary conditions used in deterioration models.
Flint has continued her professional service, and is now a member of the control group for the ASCE Infrastructure Resilience Division Risk and Resilience Measurement and Communication and Dissemination committees. She also participated in several NSF workshops and panels.
Matt Hebdon’s research focuses on analysis, inspection, and preservation of bridges and transportation structures, primarily in the areas of fatigue and fracture, corrosion, and damage evaluation.
Hebdon has worked on the evaluation of fracture resilience of built-up steel members and a non-destructive method for determining in-situ rivet strength for historical bridges.
He is investigating the remaining capacity of prestressed concrete girders in a highly corrosive environment and proposed repair methods.
Hebdon is utilizing artificial intelligence and machine learning for reliable UAV assisted inspection of civil infrastructure.
He has also been heavily involved in the corrosion evaluation of a cost-effective stainless steel for the bridge industry. He is evaluating failures of anchor rods on highway structures and is assessing current fastener configurations used on steel bridges in the railroad industry.
Hebdon is active in steel bridge committees for AREMA, TRB, and AASHTO.
Eric Jacques is completing his first year at Virginia Tech and is establishing a Blast Research Laboratory focused on protection of critical infrastructure against terrorist bomb attack and accidental explosions.
His laboratory will feature a gas-detonation shock tube, unique to North American universities, to allow for economical full and scaled testing of structures under blast loads.
Jacques supports the Technical University of Dresden’s Research Training Group GRK2250 “Mineral-bonded composites for enhanced structural impact safety” as an international expert, and actively serves the American Concrete Institute (ACI) Committee 370 – Blast and Impact Load Effects, Canadian Standards Association (CSA) Committee S850 – Design and Assessment of Buildings Subjected to Blast Loads, and CSA S852 – Blast Resistant Window Anchor Systems.
STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING AND MATERIALS
The SEM graduate program has over 70 graduate students, with more than 40 of these students participating in research. The Thomas M. Murray Structural Engineering Laboratory is busy with a number of projects, including full scale bridge beams, steel beam-column connections, composite floor diaphragms and two-way post-tensioned flat slabs. Lab operations run smoothly thanks to the efforts of Brett Farmer, Dennis Huffman, and David Mokarem. New cranes were installed in February, which double the lifting capacity compared to the previous cranes.
The group again offered CEE 3594 – Bridges, Builders and Society, which is team taught by the majority of the SEM faculty. Each faculty taught a three-class unit on some aspect of bridge design and construction. The class culminated with a 12 day trip through Italy, Austria, Switzerland, and Germany to visit the bridges that had been introduced in class. They also had the opportunity to visit the structural engineering labs at the University of Trento and The Technical University at Darmstadt.
A valuable member of our group, Vickie Mouras, Associate Professor of Practice, retired in December. She was a tremendous contributor to the group, particularly in our undergraduate teaching mission, and she will be sorely missed.
The following paragraphs provide more detail about the faculty members’ activities over the past year:
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PROGRAM AREAS
Ioannis Koutromanos completed and published a textbook on the fundamentals of linear finite element analysis (published by Wiley). This is the first book in a two-volume set. The second volume, currently under preparation, will be focused on nonlinear finite element analysis. Koutromanos has also been working on an NSF-sponsored project, in collaboration with Matthew Eatherton, to develop and calibrate analytical simulation tools for capturing inelastic deformation and fracture of structural steel members due to low-cycle fatigue.
He is also collaborating with Roberto Leon on simulating the cyclic performance of reinforced concrete beam-to-column connections, and evaluating the effectiveness of pertinent seismic design procedures.
Finally, he is working with Carin Roberts-Wollmann and Matt Hebdon on the computational and analytical evaluation of the impact of corrosion damage to bridge girders, as part of a project supported by the Virginia Transportation Research Council (VTRC).
Roberto Leon has continued his research on bond deterioration in reinforced concrete beam-column joints, resilient composite steel-concrete structures and behavior of large steel welded connections.
On the teaching side, Leon completed the renovation of the undergraduate construction material laboratory (Norris 129) and added new equipment and activities to the course, including new units on non-destructive testing of metals and concrete.
Leon continues to serve in numerous technical committees of ACI, ASCE/SEI and AISC, gave keynote lectures to international conferences in Xian (China) and Jenju (Korea), and successfully organized the CVIII International Conference on Composite Construction in Steel and Concrete.
Carin Roberts-Wollmann continues to focus on behavior of prestressed concrete bridges and buildings.
She has a continuing project with Matt Hebdon and Ioannis Koutromanos to investigate residual strength and repair techniques for corrosion damaged prestressed bridge beams.
Roberts-Wollmann has a large multi-year project underway to investigate the strength and performance of two-way post-tensioned flat slabs containing steel fibers.
She also has two projects monitoring the behavior of a post-tensioned segmental bridge in Richmond.
Roberts-Wollmann continues to serve the American Concrete Institute (ACI) as a member of Committee 423 – Prestressed Concrete. She stepped down after six years as the chair, and was awarded the Delmar L. Bloem Distinguished Service Award for her efforts.
She is also serving as a voting member of Committee 318 – Building Code, and Committee 239 – Ultra-High Performance Concrete.
Maryam Shakiba’s research focuses on composites modeling to understand and predict the response of infrastructure materials under mechanical and environmental loadings.
She has been working on multi-physics modeling of thermo-hydro-mechanical damage mechanisms of asphalt concrete at different
scales.In another project funded through Center for
Tire Research (CenTiRe), she is collaborating with mechanical engineering researchers to understand and model the fundamental thermo-chemo-mechanical mechanisms leading to tire abrasion due to tire-pavement interactions.
Shakiba was active in mechanistic materials modeling committees at ASCE-EMI and organized a mini-symposium on multi-physics multi-scale modeling of composites at the EMI conference.
She also held a successful workshop on computational materials modeling at Virginia Tech. The purpose of the workshop was to bring together researchers from different departments who are working on computational materials engineering to exchange ideas for securing NSF funding for integrative research in materials science and design.
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Students visited the Cascella bridge near Mesocco, Switzerland
During the past year, Kathleen Hancock relocated from northern Virginia to Blacksburg and looks forward to increasing her interaction with undergraduate students. She is expanding her work in highway safety analysis and visualization. Projects include developing methods for identifying high crash locations on networks, enhancing sketch planning models for safety planning and visualization, and mining unstructured officer crash naratives. She continues her work with Virginia DMV to locate all crashes on all roads in Virginia and to use the located crash data to evaluate current safety initiatives and identify new opportunities to improve highway safety in the Commonwealth. She is continually enhancing her use of technology to enrich teaching and learning in and out of the classroom.
Kevin Heaslip transitioned from the National Capital Region to Blacksburg in the last year. Dr. Heaslip has been reappointed as the Associate Director of the Electronic Systems Laboratory at the Hume Center for National Security and Technology at Virginia Tech. Heaslip has been conducting research on automated vehicle security for the National Science Foundation, connected and automated vehicle capacity for the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) and transit signal priority planning for VDOT and the Virginia Department of Rail and Public Transit. He was recently awarded a $3.125 million project from the United States Department of Energy for conducting research on cybersecurity for extremely fast charging of electric vehicles. He is an appointed member of the Resilient America Roundtable of the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine. Several students from Dr. Heaslip’s research group completed their graduate programs in the last year and five students are expected to graduate
in the coming year.
Susan Hotle is an assistant professor who teaches Introduction to Transportation Engineering and Analysis of Civil Infrastructure Systems and, starting this spring, will teach Airport Planning and Design. She is a researcher in the NEXTOR II consortium and serves as principal investigator on a project sponsored by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) investigating surface performance and delay at core U.S. airports. Also, this past year she advised a student project sponsored through the Airport Cooperative Research Program (ACRP) Graduate Award on the impact of airport size on offered airline fares. Dr. Hotle is an active member of the Aviation Applications Section (AAS) of INFORMS, serving as a Best Student Presentation committee chair.
Bryan Katz was promoted this year to an Associate Professor of Practice. He continues to teach Introduction to Civil Engineering, Introduction to Transportation Engineering, Geometric Design of Highways, and Transportation Safety. In addition, he advises the Virginia Tech Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE) student chapter. The ITE student chapter’s Traffic Bowl Team won the State section and competed at the Southern District ITE meeting in Mobile, Alabama in the Spring. At the meeting, Katz was awarded the Excellence in Transportation Engineering Education Award from the Southern District of the Institute of Transportation Engineers. He brings practical experience into the classroom through his position at toXcel where he serves as the Vice President of Engineering. Katz remains active as a member of two Transportation Research Board Committees and was elected this year as Vice Chair of Research for the National Committee on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (NCUTCD)
Hesham Rakha, with researchers and students in the Center for Sustainable Mobility at the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute, worked on various national-level projects sponsored by the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Research and Technology, the
The Transportation Infrastructure and Systems Engineering Program (TISE) had a productive academic year. The group includes the National Surface Transportation Safety Center for Excellence and the Federal Aviation Administration National Center of Excellence for Aviation Research (NEXTOR). TISE Program is comprised of 11 faculty members and 65 graduate students. Several TISE faculty are affiliated with the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute (VTTI). The group is supported Sandi Wagener as the group’s administrative assistant.
TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE AND SYSTEMS
PROGRAM AREAS
Professor Antonio Trani’s class visited the Virginia Tech Montgomery Executive Airport on a class field trip.
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Department of Energy, and Ford. Rakha and his research team published 17 peer-reviewed journal publications, had two peer-reviewed journal papers accepted for publication, published 26 refereed conference publications, had 14 refereed conference publications accepted for publication, and made 33 conference presentations. He was one of two keynote speakers at the 5th IEEE International Conference on Models and Technologies for Intelligent Transportation Systems, Napoli, Italy. His work was cited over 1150 based on Google Scholar. Rakha serves as an Associate Editor for the IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Transportation Systems, the Journal of Intelligent Transportation Systems, the Journal of Advanced Transportation and serves as a member of the editorial board of the Transportation Letters: The International Journal of Transportation Research and the IET Journal of Intelligent Transport Systems.
Antonio Trani was involved in four projects sponsored by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). Two of the projects are evaluating the benefit of advanced air traffic surveillance procedures for oceanic flights. Hardware and software tools available in moderns aircraft allow them to be spaced closer from other aircraft this improving airspace capacity. The Air Transportation Systems Laboratory has developed computer simulation models to test these procedures before they are implemented worldwide. Another project with FAA is evaluating the benefit of advanced weather information provided to pilots via a tablet application. This project involves the FAA and the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR). The Air Transportation Systems Laboratory developed a large database to help airport designers to locate optimal runway exits. The database contains 14 million landing records and will be used by industry and FAA. Trani’s group performed a recent study for NASA on the future use of supersonic aircraft worldwide. This study estimated the demand for six supersonic transport aircraft configurations with seating capacities ranging from 13 to 60 passengers. The study focused on the potential demand of “low boom” supersonic aircraft capable of cruising at 1.6 times the speed of sound over land with reduced noise impacts to the population.
Linbing Wang has devoted his research
to genome-based design methods for stone-based infrastructure materials, energy harvesting, green and sensing technologies, reliability and risk analysis, and safety of interdependent infrastructure. He has led the Virginia Tech efforts in the Regional University Transportation Center competition led by and granted to Pennsylvania State University. In the Spring, Dr. Wang developed and taught a new graduate course “Sensing and Deep Learning” for infrastructure health monitoring. He also successfully led the organization of an international workshop on international education of transportation infrastructure, May
26, 2017 in Beijing; and served as an executive co-chair for the 2nd Transportation Research Congress in May 2017, Beijing, China. As the departmental representative, Dr. Wang actively served as the president of the Engineering Faculty Organization of College of Engineering. Under his leadership and the Dean’s strong support, the EFO established its Inspiration Seminar Series.
PROGRAM AREAS
Professors Montasir Abbas and Gerardo Flintsch were awarded Dean’s Awards for Excellence by the College of Engineering.
“Safety has always been a priority with me,” said Kathleen Hancock, associate professor in civil engineering. “The ultimate goal of my current research is to reduce fatalities on the roads.”
Hancock aims to do this through her partnership with the Highway Safety Office in the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV). In an effort to improve safety, she developed a process for her team to look at every individual crash, which consists of about 130,000 annually, and to locate it as accurately as possible, even down to the lane it occurred in, based on information provided on the Virginia crash form.
She takes that a step further and provides specific reports that the DMV uses in workshops and that jurisdictions use for grant applications and other planning activities.
Hancock’s research group focuses on the human factors side of the data, including enforcement and programming, while other researchers focus on the road infrastructure side
of crash data.Hancock works with graduate
students and with the Center for Geospatial Information Technologies (CGIT) on campus to geocode and supplement the crash data and to solve problems such as identifying the highest crash intersections and using data mining techniques to extract information from the text that police officers write in their reports about the crashes and why they occurred. This information can also be used for on-demand support when officials ask for more information about a crash and what can potentially be done to avoid a similar circumstance in the future.
While the ultimate goal is to reduce crashes and fatalities, there is also a goal to reduce the cost associated with these crashes. These costs include not only the actual dollars associated with the crash but also the costs associated with traffic delay.
A fender bender in northern Virginia can cost 40 minutes in someone’s commute to work. Multiply
that by 250,000 vehicles and that is a significant amount of lost work time.
“The more we can minimize that, the more value comes back to society,” Hancock said. “If we can understand what is causing crashes, we can provide tools to minimize them and provide savings all around.”
Her career wasn’t always focused on highway safety though. When Hancock first graduated with her bachelors degree from Colorado State
University, she started working at Southwest Research Institute testing roadside barriers.
She then moved on to consulting in Washington, DC, but found that wasn’t what she wanted to do, which pushed her to go back and earn her advanced degrees from Vanderbilt University.
Throughout her career, she has studied highway safety, freight operations and planning, and geospatially enabling decision-making in relation to transportation problems.
During her time at Vanderbilt, she discovered geographic information systems (GIS) and started using that to find solutions to problems. That expertise enabled her to partner on a wide variety of projects, which she continues to do.
“My partnership with the DMV has been really great and, at this point in my career, I am excited to focus back where I started, on highway safety,” Hancock said.
Hancock works to improve highway safety
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The Via Scholarships are made possible through the generosity of the late Mrs. Marion Bradley Via of Roanoke, Virginia, and her family. In 1987, Mrs. Via contributed $5 million each to the Departments of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Civil and Environmental Engineering. Virginia Tech’s Board of Visitors subsequently named the ECE department in honor of Mrs. Via’s deceased father, Harry Lynde Bradley, and the CEE department in honor of her late husband, Charles E. Via, Jr. Mrs. Via died in 1993.
Both departments use a portion of the endowment to award scholarships to qualifying students. These scholarships are among the most competitive in the country. Since the Via endowment was created in 1987, the department has received more than $20 million in support.
We are proud to acknowledge that this is the 32nd year of the Via endowment and the Via Report. We want to take this opportunity to recognize the current Via scholars as well as alumni that have come through the program for the last 32 years and continue to fulfill the mission set by the Via family.
MEET THE VIA SCHOLARS
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Hometown: Brielle, New JerseyWork Experience: Internship at Railroad Construction Company, Inc. doing
estimating in Patterson, New Jersey and internship at George Harms Construction Company, Inc. in Howell, New Jersey.
Career Goals: I hope to become a PE and am excited to see where my career takes me. It has always been a dream of mine to begin my own company. I know how hard that is but I am excited for the challenge when the time is right.
Hometown: Springfield, VirginiaWork Experience: Design Engineer Intern at Bohler EngineeringCareer Goals: I would like to become a structural engineer, earn my PE license,
and design and implement infrastructure abroad in developing regions.
Hometown: Gate City, VirginiaWork Experience: Civil Engineering Intern in the Location and Design division of
the Virginia Department of TransportationCareer Goals: My goals are to help my hometown of Gate City, Virginia grow in
its infrastructure and development. I would like to benefit those in need with my work by designing a wide variety of projects over the course of my career. Although I will likely focus in Transportation and Infrastructure Systems, my dream job has always been to design baseball stadiums and other sports venues.
UNDERGRADUATE
Benjamin Meseroll
Emily Potter
Reese Williams
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VIA SCHOLARS
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Seven Fields, PennsylvaniaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Penn State UniversityCareer Goals: I hope to work on large scale stormwater management projects, such as
the Deep Tunnel Project in Chicago. By managing the stormwater runoff from major cities with projects such as these, we can mitigate many of the pollutants that enter water bodies across the U.S.
MASTERS
Stefany Baron
GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERINGHometown: Berwyn, PennsylvaniaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Lafayette CollegeCareer Goals: Become involved in the field of infrastructure geotechnics and help
modernize American infrastructure.
Michael Bennett
GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERINGHometown: New Orleans, LouisianaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Virginia TechCareer Goals: Obtain a master’s and Ph.D. in civil engineering and eventually make a
career doing research in coastal engineering
Nick Brilli
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Pittsburgh, PennsylvaniaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Clemson UniversityCareer Goals: My career goal is to eventually get a job working as a hydraulic or
ecological engineer for a stream restoration company.
Michael Calfe
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VIA SCHOLARS
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Fairfax, VirginiaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Virginia TechCareer Goals: I plan to work in design and consulting to address hydrologic and hydraulic
impacts of development, eventually obtaining my PE. I hope to continue to be inspired by new ideas.
VIA SCHOLARS
Helen Chen
CONSTRUCTION ENGINEERING AND MANAGEMENTHometown: Columbia, South CarolinaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Clemson UniversityCareer Goals: To become an expert on the intersect between architecture and
engineering and on the improved sustainable building practices. I would like to work in both academia and industry.
Emma Coleman
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Charlotte, North CarolinaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: North Carolina A&T State UniversityCareer Goals: Work for a research lab or consulting firm focusing on natural resource
management and sustainable practices. I want to become a professor and impact future generations and empower members of underrepresented groups to pursue STEM careers.
Matthew Ferby
STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING AND MATERIALSHometown: Warrenton, VirginiaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: United States Coast Guard AcademyCareer Goals: Continue my service in the US Coast Guard at a civil engineering unit or
base facilities engineering department, working to provide short support and manage a variety of construction projects, allowing me to work toward obtaining my PE license.
Megan Geboski
MASTERS
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VIA SCHOLARS
STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING AND MATERIALSHometown: West Chester, PennsylvaniaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Penn State UniversityCareer Goals: I plan to work for an engineering firm doing design and analysis of
structures, including working on many exciting and innovative structural design projects. I also plan to earn my PE license.
Jack Gergel
STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING AND MATERIALSHometown: Knoxville, TennesseeLocation of Undergraduate Studies: University of Tennessee, KnoxvilleCareer Goals: I plan to complete my Master’s degree and then go into industry with a
focus on sustainability in respect to structures or continue to pursue a Ph.D. I would like to take my experience from industry into academia as a professor after acquiring my PE license.
Morgan Jenkins
GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERINGHometown: Lynnfield, MassachusettsLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Merrimack CollegeCareer Goals: After earning my masters degree, I hope to return to geotechnical consulting
in Boston and have the opportunity to work on complex and unique projects, while working to achieve my PE.
Alex Juliano
STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING AND MATERIALSHometown: Richlands, VirginiaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Virginia TechCareer Goals: My goals are to work as a structural engineer. After 6-10 years of experience,
I plan to get my PE license and eventually work my way up to managing other design engineers and their projects within a structural engineering firm.
Colton Keene
MASTERS
31
VIA SCHOLARS
GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERINGHometown: Ringtown, PennsylvaniaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Bucknell UniversityCareer Goals: My career goal is to become a professional engineer and ultimately take
on a management role in a firm or start my own company.
Roger Knittle
STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING AND MATERIALSHometown: Indianapolis, IndianaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Purdue UniversityCareer Goals: I would like to work in the area of structural restoration and rehabilitation.
Seth Lindley
TRANSPORTATION AND INFRASTRUCTURE SYSTEMSHometown: Abbeville, South CarolinaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Clemson UniversityCareer Goals: Continue to serve as a civil engineer and officer in the USAF and
contribute to the sustainment of USAF infrastructure around the world.
Kyle Maeger
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Clarkston, MichiganLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Michigan State UniversityCareer Goals: Work in the water resources field with a focus in engineering and public
policy.
Eric Matynowski
MASTERS
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VIA SCHOLARS
GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERINGHometown: Mingo Junction, OhioLocation of Undergraduate Studies: University of CincinnatiCareer Goals: Work for a geotechnical design company working on large-scale projects
and obtain my professional engineering license. Outside of work, volunteer with Engineers Without Borders and serve on international projects.
Julie Paprocki
GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERINGHometown: Manahawkin, New JerseyLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Virginia TechCareer Goals: My goals are to become a professional engineer, lead a
multidisciplinary team of engineers to solve slope stability issues before they become emergencies, and ensure quality control to the point where no liability work has to be done on implemented projects.
Jenna Ritchie
STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING AND MATERIALSHometown: Henrico, VirginiaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Virginia TechCareer Goals: Work for a structural engineering firm and become a PE. I hope to be
involved in large, challenging projects.
Joshua Rosenthal
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Larchmont, New YorkLocation of Undergraduate Studies: University of VirginiaCareer Goals: Provide engineering consultation and expertise to cities that experience
water management problems. I want to continuously lean about hydrology, climate change, and sustainability.
Zoe Schmitt
MASTERS
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VIA SCHOLARS
GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERINGHometown: Madison, West VirginiaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Marshall UniversityCareer Goals: Make contributions toward the betterment of society in the form of
foundations, retaining walls, dams, and other geotechnical services.
William Shaffer
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Columbia, South CarolinaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Clemson UniversityCareer Goals: I plan to pursue a career working toward purifying and providing clean water
supplies in developing countries.
Storme Spencer
CONSTRUCTION ENGINEERING AND MANAGEMENTHometown: Chesapeake, VirginiaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Virginia Military InstituteCareer Goals: I aspire to be a building construction project manager.
Zachary Sprinkle
STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING AND MATERIALSHometown: Signal Mountain, TennesseeLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Virginia TechCareer Goals: After earning my Master’s degree, I would like to work in the structural steel
industry as a fabricator or as an ironworker constructing tall buildings. Eventually, I would like to work for a structural engineering firm and become a PE.
Ryan Stevens
MASTERS
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VIA SCHOLARS
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Richmond, VirginiaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Virginia TechCareer Goals: I have an interest in hydraulics with respect to stormwater and non-point
source pollution. I want to apply these interests in private, public, or academic industries.
David Woodson
MASTERS
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Columbus, OhioLocation of Undergraduate Studies: The Ohio State UniversityCareer Goals: Become a PE and apply my knowledge in an international setting as part of
my professional practice in water resources and environmental engineering.
Maria Amaya
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Clear Spring, MarylandLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Mississippi State UniversityCareer Goals: After graduation, I would like to transition into industry work. Ultimately, I
would like to work in both industry and academic settings.
Matthew Blair
DOCTORAL
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VIA SCHOLARS
TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE AND SYSTEMSHometown: Sacramento, CaliforniaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: US Air Force AcademyCareer Goals: To improve Air Force asset management and design practices in a
resource-constrained environment.
VIA SCHOLARS
Vincent Bongioanni
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Elizabethtown, PennsylvaniaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Iowa State UniversityCareer Goals: Conduct research and teach about current environmental issues, particularly
water resource quality issues at the watershed scale.
Conrad Brendel
DOCTORAL
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Garner, North CarolinaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: North Carolina State UniversityCareer Goals: I want to be a consulting engineer and return to teach at a university. My
ultimate goal is to teach, mentor, and inspire young engineers.
Meredith Bullard
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Leawood, KansasLocation of Undergraduate Studies: University of PittsburghCareer Goals: I want to pursue an academic career through teaching and researching
environmental microbiology.
Abraham Cullom
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VIA SCHOLARS
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Durango, ColoradoLocation of Undergraduate Studies: University of Colorado at BoulderCareer Goals: To continue to do research to publish.
James Hurley
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Landenburg, PennsylvaniaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Johns Hopkins UniversityCareer Goals: After earning my doctorate degree, I would like to pursue a career in
research, potentially in academia or the public sector.
Rebecca Kriss
DOCTORAL
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Pittsburgh, PennsylvaniaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Hanyan University, Seoul, Republic of KoreaCareer Goals: I would like to be a professional in the field of coastal engineering as a
researcher and educator.
Michael Lee
STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING AND MATERIALSHometown: Denton, North CarolinaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: University of North Carolina at CharlotteCareer Goals: I intend to become a professional engineer and work in the structural
design industry.
Gregory Loflin
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VIA SCHOLARS
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Miami, FloridaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Florida State UniversityCareer Goals: I plan to become a professor to continue conducting research on aquatic
contaminants and shape the learning experiences of young engineers. I also aim to become involved in environmental policy.
Kathryn Lopez
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Richmond, VirginiaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: US Military Academy at West PointCareer Goals: My goal is to be a university professor and make a significant contribution in
the field of environmental engineering.
Seth Lotts
DOCTORAL
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Mount Rainier, MarylandLocation of Undergraduate Studies: University of Maryland, College ParkCareer Goals: I plan on continuing my research in academia or in a national laboratory.
Ayella Maile-Moskowitz
TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE AND SYSTEMSHometown: Corsicana, TexasLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Virginia TechCareer Goals: Working for a government or private industry in managing infrastructure
assets with a specific interest in the field of safety.
Ross McCarthy
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VIA SCHOLARS
CONSTRUCTION ENGINEERING AND MANAGEMENTHometown: Ellenwood, GeorgiaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Clemson UniversityCareer Goals: I would like to pursue an industry career in project management of a
sustainable building design and retrofits. I would also like to return as a professor that bridges STEM fields with sustainability concepts.
Jeannie Purchase
GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERINGHometown: Lexington, KentuckyLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Brigham Young UniversityCareer Goals: I plan on continuing in academia as a university professor. I would like to
continue researching while teaching and mentoring future civil engineers.
Tyler Quick
DOCTORAL
STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING AND MATERIALSHometown: Allentown, PennsylvaniaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: University of OklahomaCareer Goals: I would like to pursue a career in academia as a researcher. I hope to apply
my knowledge to advance research in the field of structural engineering, as well as instill my passion for learning and knowledge in future engineers.
Samuel Sherry
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VIA SCHOLARS
ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCESHometown: Stockton, CaliforniaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: University of California, Los AngelesCareer Goals: I hope to become an expert in urban water sustainability and help
communities achieve more sustainable water practices through science/engineering, policy, and outreach
Emily Parker
GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERINGHometown: Kalona, IowaLocation of Undergraduate Studies: University of IowaCareer Goals: Contribute to the US Army Corps of Engineers mission by providing
technical support through practical and cost effective means. .
Lucas Walshire
DOCTORAL
VIA ALUMNI: WHERE ARE THEY NOW?
To see a list of Via alumni through the years, visit our website at https://www.cee.vt.edu/via-alumni-where-are-they-now/.
If you would like to update your information, contact Courtney Sakry at csakry@vt.edu or call the CEE main office at 540-231-0635.
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VIA SCHOLARS
VIA ALUMNI
GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERINGHometown: Corvallis, OregonLocation of Undergraduate Studies: Brigham Young UniversityCareer Goals: I plan to become a university professor so I can perform research in the field I
love, as well as encourage students to become excellent civil engineers.
Kristin Ulmer
CEE ALUMNI
Michael S. Abraham .........................1976
Tiffany E. Adams .............................. 1996
William and Nancy Aden .................1967
Istiak Ahmed ......................................2015
Thomas R. Albee ...............................1978
S. K. Anderson ...................................1962
William M. Anderson ...................... 2009
James M. Anthony ........................... 1969
Kofi Asiedu ........................................2002
Kevin Aswegan ..................................2012
Lawrence F. Ayers ............................ 1954
Pooya Azar ....................................... 2008
Thomas T. Baber .............................. 1969
Walter F. Bailey.................................. 1972
Kelso S. Baker .................................... 1951
Jennel G. Baltazar ............................2007
Brendan Bambrick ............................1993
Tim Banta ...........................................1978
Brian Barger ......................................2005
Todd C. Barnes ..................................1975
Stephen H. Barnes ........................... 1980
Justin Bartlett ...................................2013
Sandra G. Bartley ..............................1970
Bruce R. Bates ...................................1979
Nathan M. Bath ................................2002
Gary C. Beach .................................... 1972
Jeremy W. Beach ...............................1993
Courtney A. Beamon. .......................1995
Ronald L. Beck ...................................1970
Alan J. Becker .....................................1971
David A. Benevelli .............................1977
Karen R. Benner ............................... 1996
Jessie J. Berg ................................... 2008
Danelle M. Bernard ..........................1985
Brian W. Bersch ................................. 1981
Michael N. Biscotte ......................... 1980
Eric R. Blocher ................................... 2011
Randall W. Boe ................................... 1991
Charles P. Boepple ...........................1979
Harold W. Bohannon ........................ 1968
Kyle T. Bollinger .............................. 2008
Mary Ann S. Bonadeo. .....................1995
Steven R. Bonham ............................1973
Doran J. Bosso ................................. 2006
J.R. Bowles ..........................................1974
H.B. Bowles ........................................1985
Jerry D. Brammer ............................. 1968
Clarence O. Brickey .......................... 1991
William F. Brittle .............................. 1969
Thomas W. Brockenbrough .............1942
Roger L. Brockenbrough ................ 1954
Thomas A. Broderick ....................... 1986
Glenn E. Brown ..................................1963
Robert W. Brown ............................. 2000
Michael C. Brown .............................. 1991
Craig S. Bryant ...................................1971
Cameron L. Bryant ............................ 1991
W. Barry Bryant ..................................1971
Guy W. Buford ....................................1952
Ruth Anne R. Burchnall ....................1976
David M. Burk ....................................1974
Douglas W. Burks ..............................1979
Alisa M. Burns ................................. 2006
Dorothy G. Callihan ..........................1982
Steven T. Capito................................1995
Thomas M. Cardman ........................ 2011
Valerie L. Carpenter-Ho ................. 1999
R.D. Carson .........................................1971
James N. Carter ................................1975
Barrett T. Catlett ............................ 2009
Kelly A. Cave ..................................... 1984
Jung-Yeon S. Chang ..........................1988
Justin J. Chang ..................................2017
Craig A. Cheney .............................. 2004
R. Bradley Chewning ....................... 1964
Trenton M. Clark ...............................1993
David D. Clarke ................................. 1990
David W. Cocke ................................. 1981
Kevin R. Collins ................................. 1989
Tammy L. Conforti ............................1995
George R. Conner .............................1965
Robert H. Connock ...........................1962
Christy Connors ................................ 1991
Thomas J. Cook ................................ 1980
Fred O. Cornett .................................1995
Louis J. Couture ............................... 2001
William E. Cox ................................... 1966
Thomas H. Cox................................... 1991
Lindy B. Cranwell ............................. 2009
2017-2018The donors recognized on the following pages made a contribution to the Via Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering (CEE) during fiscal year 2016 (7/1/17-6/30/18). Although every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of this report, we acknowledge that errors may have occured. If you name has been omitted or listed incorrectly, please accept our sincere apologies and send any corrections to the CEE main office at (540) 231-6635.
41
VIA DONORS
Jerry D. Crim ..................................... 1980
John M. Critchfield ......................... 2004
James F. Cruise .................................1974
Raymond G. and Madelyn Curry ... 1954
Glenn W. Custis ..................................1971
Eric C. Daly .........................................2017
Thomas J. Dalzell ..............................1958
Edgar S. Daniels ................................1958
Steven M. Davis ................................1982
Brenda Dawson Lukefahr ................1974
John T. DeBell ................................... 1968
Mark A. DeCapri ............................... 1981
David D. Dee ......................................1987
Stephen R. DeLoach .........................1978
Bernard J. Deneke ........................... 1986
Kanneth E. Derrenbacher ................1982
Greg R. Deubler................................ 1994
James B. Diamond ............................1970
Robert E. Dick .................................. 1989
Brian K. Diefenderfer ...................... 1996
Richard M. DiSalvo ...........................1977
Erin P. Donovan ................................ 1999
Joseph E. Dove .................................. 1981
Thomas A. Downey ...........................1958
Philip J. Drazek ..................................1993
Betsy E. Dulin ................................... 1986
Vernon M. Duncan ............................1965
Mary L. Duncan ................................ 1989
Walter W. Duncan ............................. 1951
Billy L. Edge ...................................... 1964
Richard J. Edinger ............................ 1990
Brian C. Elliott ...................................1977
Anne M. Ellis ..................................... 1980
Charles L. Ernest ...............................1970
Douglas R. Fahl..................................1967
Kimberly S. Farah ............................. 1984
Matthew T. Faris ...............................1979
Dwight L. Farmer ..............................1974
Charles B. Feagans ........................... 1972
Laura G. Felter ................................. 2009
Glendon J. Fetterolf ........................ 1996
George M. Filz. ..................................1992
Jay M. Fitzgerald...............................1976
Kiera S. Fitzgerald ............................1982
Brendan T. FitzPatrick .................... 2001
Molly A. Fox ....................................... 2011
Marcus I. Freeman ............................2013
Chris J. Friberg ..................................1985
Scott A. Galbraith ............................. 1991
Lindsey K. Gardner ........................... 1961
Joshua C. George ............................. 1994
Anne M. Garmain ............................. 1989
Patrick J. Gerstner ............................1993
John M. Gilbert ................................ 1986
Jeffrey L. Gilliland .............................1987
Kyle E. Goode ................................... 1969
Alan K. Gordon ..................................1978
Andrew J. Gorecki .............................1995
Joshua L. Gormer ............................ 2000
Lewis H. Grant .................................. 1969
Thomas B. Gray .................................1973
Dixie M. Griffin ..................................1970
Timrod A. Groover ............................1979
Martha E. Gross ............................... 2010
Donald R. Grubbs ...............................1971
Kedar R. Halbe .................................. 2010
Terry D. Halkyard ..............................1977
Charles D. Hall ...................................1970
Sarah Leigh A. Hammack ................1983
Talmadge L. Hansen .........................2013
Belinda M. Harper ........................... 1996
Timothy P. Harpst .............................1975
Brandon C. Harrison ....................... 2006
Joshua E. Harrison ........................... 2001
E.F. Hart ............................................. 1966
Luther L. Hash .................................. 1969
Jerry L. Haynes ..................................1977
Robert J. Healy .................................. 1981
Kevin P. Heaslip ................................2002
Max L. Heckman ................................1975
Larry G. Hedgepeth ..........................1976
Daniel J. Heil .................................... 2008
Jessica A. Hekl ...................................2013
Buford B. Heller .................................1975
Gregory M. Hensley ....................... 2004
Gregory W. Hemandorfer .............. 2004
Pablo A. Hernandez ......................... 1989
Eric T. Hirschmann ............................2015
Cassandra R. Hockman ...................2007
Clayton C. Hodges ........................... 1994
Hunter T. Hodges ............................ 2006
Gregory T. Holbrook .........................2012
Alex B. Holleman ............................. 2009
Don W. Holloway ...............................1957
Michael W. Hopke .............................1979
Daniel B. Horne .................................1973
Edward G. Horstkamp ..................... 1986
Kimbery C. Hughes ...........................1985
Charles S. Hughes ............................1958
Jeffrey M. Hugney ............................1988
Thomas N. Hunnicutt .......................1959
Matthew C. Hurst .............................1997
Kevin S. Hurt .................................... 2004
Matthew C. Jackson .........................1993
Robert F. Jansen .............................. 1980
2017-2018
42
VIA DONORS
R. J. McCracken .................................1973
David I. McCready ............................1974
Michael P. McGuire .........................2005
Garland H. McKenzie ....................... 1981
Frank R. McNeice .............................1967
James H. Melick ................................1976
Ronald L. Meng ................................ 1996
Joseph J. Messersmith ................... 1964
Brian C. Metcalfe ............................. 1998
Robert S. Miller .................................1967
Richard O. Mines ..............................1983
Luke D. Minnich ................................2012
Alvin S. Mistr .................................... 1969
Jeremy M. Mocny .............................1997
Colleen R. Montgomery ................. 1990
Steven T. Moore ................................1982
Anthony J. Moraco ...........................1982
Joe M. Morgan ................................. 1968
Herbert W. Morgan ..........................1975
Laura M. Morillo............................... 1984
David C. Morris ................................ 1990
Michelle E. Motchos ....................... 1996
Victoria A. Mouras ...........................1979
Joshua M. Mouras .......................... 2006
Michael P. Mozingo ..........................1965
J.R. U. Mujagic ................................. 2000
Kenneth H. Murray ...........................1965
Kevin E. Murray .................................1983
Soonkie Nam ....................................2005
Charles D. Newhouse .......................1992
Joseph L. Newland ........................... 1986
Albert L. Nichols ...............................1963
James M. Nichols ............................. 1943
Paul R. Nichols ...................................1975
Christopher L. Nolan. ...................... 2016
Samuel J Lasley ................................ 2010
Kara E. Lattimer. ..............................2002
Steven R. Lavinder ............................1985
Scott B. Lawson ................................ 2001
Peter T. Lazarevich ......................... 2006
James L. Leeth...................................1974
Benny E. Lenox ..................................1979
Jeffrey N. Lighthiser .........................1977
Hai Lin .................................................2015
Charles R. Linamen ............................1971
Alan T. Lingerfelt ..............................1976
Charles J. Logan ................................1985
Jon O. Loker .......................................1958
Stephen R. Long ................................1983
James F. Loudon ................................ 1961
Ronald A. Love ...................................1977
James K. Lowe ...................................1978
Daniel P. Lynch ................................. 1989
Gary S. Lynn .......................................1988
Scott P. Mackey ................................1993
Mercer R. MacPherson ....................1963
Thomas S. Maddock ........................ 1950
David L. Maddox ...............................1979
Peter Manning .................................. 1981
Nicholas B. Mansourimoaied ........ 2014
Jose A. Marcano ...............................2002
Daniel J. March................................. 2001
Burton M. Marshall ..........................1962
David R. Marshall ..............................1992
Ray E. Martin .................................... 1964
Donald L. Martin ...............................1974
Michael R. Martin .............................1974
Laurie C. Martin .............................. 2000
Thomas A. Mason ............................. 1972
Lisa J. McAdam .................................1983
Benjamin C. Jarosz .......................... 1999
Jordan A. Jarrett ...............................2013
Jeena R. Jayamon ..............................2012
Katharine P. Jenkins .........................1977
Eric J. Johannigmeier .......................2013
James T. Johnson ..............................1978
Paul B. Johnson .................................1974
Meredith T. Jones ............................ 1994
John H. Jones .....................................1973
James R. Jones ..................................1970
Patricia and Paul Jordan ................. 1980
Williams A. Joyner ........................... 1966
William E. Junda .............................. 2000
Christopher E. Kaldahl. ....................1995
John Y. Kang .......................................1992
Govindan Kannan ............................. 1999
Bryan J. Katz .................................... 2000
Christine S. Kelly .............................. 1984
Jason F. Kennedy. ............................ 2008
Ramzi Khuri ....................................... 1996
Martin S. Kigudde ........................... 1996
Walter D. Kilbourne ......................... 1980
Charles and Amy Kilpatrick ........... 1986
Jong Min Kim ....................................2005
Meeok Kim ........................................2003
Clifford G. King ................................. 1984
Herbert G. Kipp ................................ 1968
Ronald N. Kirkpatrick ....................... 1981
Thomas A. Kite ..................................1976
Dennis W. Knight ..............................1992
John W. Koenig. ................................. 1991
Evangelos Kontozoglou ...................2015
Jeffrey Kuttesch ...............................2003
Taylor M. Laforge ..............................2013
Matthew R. Larsen .......................... 2001
2017-2018
43
VIA DONORS
Leavelle P. Rapp ............................... 1986
Harold M. Raynor ..............................1962
Robert M. Reddick ......................... 2000
Alexander B. Reeb ............................ 2011
John B. Reeves ..................................1970
Glenn W. Rehberger ........................ 1969
James B. Richards ............................ 1969
Robert G. Richardson .......................1988
Jack E. Rinker.................................... 1960
Randolph P. Rivinus ......................... 1968
Robert M. Roberts ............................1975
Kip M. Robinson ............................... 1968
Juliana M. Rochester .......................2017
James W. Ronner ...............................1975
Michael Roselius ..............................2015
John M. Rosenquest .........................1979
Richard A. Ruckman ......................... 1981
Amy L. Rudge Wyks ..........................1997
Charles E. Runyon ............................. 1961
Thomas D. Rust .................................1965
John W. Ryan ......................................1956
Ronald W. Rye ....................................1974
Amit Sachan .....................................2003
Dallas W. Safriet ...............................1967
Aaren T. Salido .................................2007
Alexander Salmin ............................. 1998
Alexander J. Sarant ......................... 2014
Mary O. Sawitzki ...............................1995
Jonathan M. Sawyers .......................1993
Robert F. Scheller ............................ 1989
Rebecca M. Schneider ....................2007
Daniel N. Schwartz .......................... 2014
Richard J. Seabrook ......................... 1984
James A. Serbinski ...........................2012
Patrick N. Shaffner ........................... 1961
Robert L. Nordstrom ........................ 1951
Robert S. Notte .................................1997
Charles A. Nuckols............................1987
Kenneth R. Nuttall ........................... 1980
Raymond J. O’Donnell. .................... 1980
Christine M. Osborne ..................... 1996
David J. Oshinski ............................... 1981
Ethan M. Pacifico ..............................2017
George T. Paris ..................................1975
Jeffrey L. Parks .................................2002
Benjamin C. Parrish ..........................2012
Maysill G. Pascal ..............................2003
James W. Patteson .......................... 1984
Gerald W. Peaks ............................... 1969
Carrie H. Pendleton ........................ 2000
Michael R. Perschbacher ................ 1994
Laura L. Peters ..................................1992
Jeffrey S. Petrucci ............................ 1980
Kelly L. Pettersen ............................. 2014
Ann E. Piazza ...................................... 1981
Matthew C. Pillow ........................... 2009
Katherine G. Plasket ........................1987
David K. Porter ..................................1992
David B. Powers ............................... 2000
Katie A. Price ................................... 2004
Marcia V. Prowell ..............................1992
Carl W. Pugh .......................................1985
Archie D. Pugh ................................... 1991
Michael R. Putallaz .......................... 2001
Michael J. Quillen .............................1970
Thomas J. Quirk .............................. 2000
Robert R. Radspinner ......................2007
Brian L. Ramaley ...............................1975
Michael D. Ramsey ...........................1979
Brett T. Shankles ..............................2003
Edward J. Shea ..................................1997
Cliff C. Shieh ..................................... 1980
Adnan Shindala ................................ 1964
Michele L. Shupe Sherwood ........... 1991
Michael T. Siburt ..............................2003
John S. Siczka ................................... 1994
Larry M. Simmons.............................1970
Stephen L. Simpson ........................ 1986
Ralph M. Simpson ............................ 1969
Jefferson and Carol Sinclair ...........1975
Japsimran Singh .............................. 2016
William M. Skeen .............................. 1972
Anthony T. Sklanka ...........................1975
Matthew D. Sleep ........................... 2006
Aaron B. Small ................................... 1991
Daniel R. Smith .................................1979
Elizabeth F. Smith ............................ 1986
Mark S. Smith ................................... 1998
Paul J. Smith ......................................1988
Guy R. Sproles ....................................1971
Elizabeth V. St. Angelo ................... 2014
Gregory T. Stecher .......................... 2010
Richard E. Steele ............................. 1969
Bryan W. Stevenson......................... 1996
Jack H. Stewart .................................1957
Todd W. Swanson ..............................1974
Richad D. Swartout .......................... 1969
Matthew K. Swenty ........................ 2009
Jesse W. Sykes ...................................1959
Jianhua Tang ......................................1997
Boris O. Taran ....................................1970
Robert S. Tate....................................1992
Mark A. Teachey ............................... 1986
Henry J. Theiss ................................. 1994
2017-2018
44
VIA DONORS
William R. Thomas ........................... 1994
Charles R. Thompson ........................1971
Dominic M. Tiburzi ...........................1975
John A. Tice ....................................... 1966
Samuel C. Tignor ..............................1958
William V. Todd ..................................1982
John S. Torell .....................................1993
Dennis D. Truax .................................1976
Steven J. Tschetter ...........................1992
Kwong T. Tse ......................................1978
Elizabeth A. Turner ........................... 1972
Frederick J. Turner ............................1959
Richard B. Turpin...............................1962
Terry J. Tyler .......................................1985
Nathan S. Umberger .......................2005
Steve M. Varner ................................1987
Leo A. Vecellio .................................. 1968
James H. Viox ....................................1965
Susan Z. Wadsworth .........................1985
Trevor A. Walker ................................2013
Dong Wang .......................................2007
Roy E. Waugh .....................................1983
A.S. Weber ..........................................1977
Amanda M. Weikmann .................... 2016
Robert B. Welton ..............................1959
Edward C. Westerman .....................1993
Kristin M. Westover ....................... 2008
Brian L. Wheeler .................................1971
Stephen A. White ..............................1976
Kyle W. White .................................... 2010
Adele L. Whitener .............................1973
Aaron B. Whitmore .......................... 1994
John L. Whitney ................................ 1966
David C. Wiebke ................................1978
Gregory S. Williamson ....................2003
Wililam C. Wilson ...............................1971
Kord J. Wissmann ..............................1987
Daniel J. Woeste ...............................2013
Farley E. Wolford...............................1958
Gavin G. Worley ................................2007
William E. Worrall .............................2005
James M. Wright .............................. 1960
Winfield G. Wright ............................ 1981
Chenxi Xing ....................................... 2014
Kevin D. Young ................................ 2000
Charles E. Yowell ............................. 2006
Richard H. Zeigler .............................1992
Yang Zhang ....................................... 2014
Matthew W. Zurad ............................1993
Michael T. Zuravel............................ 1984
FRIENDS
Robert and Denise Anderson
John Anderson
Barbara Angelotti
Stacy M. Baughman
Richard J. Bedard
Thomas Brandon
Ted D. Britt
Brianna Buffington
Carles R. Carder
Joanne G. Carpenter
Frances D. Cohen
Thomas C. Conran
Alisa S. Cowen
Thomas R. Devine
Mary Douglas
Randel L. Dymond
2017-2018Sam and Pam Easterling
Denise Fazio
Gerardo W. Flintsch
Nancy B. Forbes
Mary L. Gaffney
Christopher Gillum
John O. Gregory
Virginia Greunke
Zhen He
Dava Z. Hoffman
Cody Huffman
Mary D. Hunter
Lisa M. Karl
Qamar A. Kazmi
Nina Kempic
Christopher B. Keyser
Alexandra King
William R. Knocke
Matthew V. Kokal
Jeffrey I. Kornspan
Roberto T. Leon
Janice M. Logan
Elizabeth A. Lucas
Marion G. Lunsford
Jerry S. McKinney
Jeffrey R. Metzger
Scott F. Midkiff
James K. Mitchell
Glenn E. Moglen
Thomas M. Murray
John T. Novak
Bruce Okrepki
Jiahong Pan
Zhiyong Pan
45
VIA DONORS
Teresa F. Price
Amy J. Pruden-Bagchi
Nancy H. Rick
Adrian Rodriguez-Marek
Michael Rugnetta
Lauri M. Rustland
Sandra D. Simpkins
Eshwari Someshwara Korachar
Robert S. Starego
Frederick W. Stephenson
Billie J. Stidham
Trevor W. Strauss
Katherine Tam
Lauren Thomas
Charles A. Tysinger
Carlos Eduardo Vega Naranjo
Erika M. Walsh
Linbing Wang
John M. Weber
Alison R. Wheeler
Mark A. Widdowson
Samuel Winter
Susan Wolford
BUSINESSES
A.G. Van Metre Services, Inc.
Advanced Stuctural Concepts, Inc.
Alliance Engineering, Inc.
American Institute of Steel Construction
American Wood Council
Annenberg Foundation
Cives Corporation Mid-Atlantic
CSSI, Inc.
D.P. Fitzgerald, Inc.
Dewberry
District of Columbia Water & Sewer Authority
Engineering Solutions
ERS Materials, LLC
Fluor Enterprises, Inc.
Froehling & Robertson, Inc.
Hayward Baker Inc.
Hazen & Sawyer, P.C.
Hirschfeld Industries Bridge, LLC
J2 Engineers, Inc.
Johns Hopkins University
Kline Engineering & Consulting, LLC
L.F. Jennings, Inc.
Lyndon Steel Company
Moe’s ROanoke Area Advertising Group, Inc.
NASSCO, Inc.
NASTT
Nucor Grating
Norfolk Southern Foundation
Pennoni Associates, Inc.
Peterson Family Foundation II
Pisgah Environmental Services
Premier Land Partners, LLC
Roanoke Branch of ASCE
Stanley D. Lindsey & Assoc. LTD
Student Engineers Council
Terra Site Contructors, LLC
Terracon Foundation
Via-Bradley College of Engineering Foundation
Virginia Carolinas Structural Steel Fabricators Association
Virginia Historical Society
Virginia Land Management, LLC
Wetland Studies and Solutions, Inc.
LAND DEVELOPMENTDESIGN INITIATIVE
DIAMOND SPONSORS
Advanced Drainage Systems
Bohler Engineering
Bowman Consulting Group, Ltd
Pennoni Associates, Inc.
PLATINUM SPONSORS
AES Consulting Engineers
ATCS, P.L.C.
Christopher Consultants, Ltd.
Clark Nexsen
Contech Engineered Solutions
Dewberry
Draper Aden Associates
Gordon
J2 Engineers
Kimley-Horn and Associates, Inc.
Maser Consulting
McAdams
Tri-Tek Engineering
GOLD SPONSORS
Accumark Subsurface Utility Services
AECOM
AST Cowen Design Group LLC
Brookfield Homes
Burgess & Niple, Inc.
Delta Airport Consultants
ESP Associates
Gay and Neel, Inc.
Hagen Engineering
Hurt & Proffitt
Jacobs
2017-2018
46
VIA DONORS
Land Design Consultants
Rinker Design Associates
Timmons Group
Vanasse Hangen Brustlin, Inc.
Van Metre Homes
Walter L. Phillips
Whitman, Requardt & Associates, LLP
William A. Hazel, Inc.
Youngblood, Tyler & Associates, P.C.
SILVER SPONSORS
Balzer & Associates
Eden & Associates
Genuario Companies
Mattern & Craig
McKim & Creed
Ramey Kemp & Associates
Wetland Studies
MUNICIPAL SPONSOR
City of Alexandria
(SWIM) AFFILIATESPROGRAM
AECOM
American Concrete Pressure Pipe Association (ACPPA)
American Water
Applied Felts, Inc.
ARCADIS US, Inc.
Benjamin Media
Black and Veatch
Brown & Caldwell
CH2M Hill
City of Aurora
City of Harrisonburg
City of Lynchburg
Denver Water
Dewberry Engineers, Inc.
DIPRA
Echologics, Mueller
EMA
GHD, Inc.
Indian Institute of Technology
National Association of Sewer Service Companies (NASSCO)
NASTT
Oildom Publishing
PICA Techologies, Inc.
PVC Pipe Association
Reline America, Inc.
Structural Technologies
Town of Blacksburg
Water Environment Research Foundation
Water Finance Research Foundation (WFRF)TER FOR
GEOTECHNICALPRACTICE ANDRESEARCH (CGPR)
AECOM
Ardaman & Associates
BLE (Bunnell-Lammons Engineering Inc.)
Condon-Johnson
Engineering Consulting Services, LLC
Exxon Mobile Foundation
George M. Filz
Brendan T. FitzPatrick
Froehling and Robertson
Gannett Fleming
GEI Consultants
Geopier Foundations
GeoSyntec Consultants
Hayward Baker - A Keller Company
Benjamin C. Jarosz
Kiewit Constructors, Inc.
Langan Engineering and Environmental Services, Inc.
Menard Engineering
Brian C. Metcalfe
Moreternch
Naval Facilities Engineering Command
Nicholson Construction
S&ME
Schnabel Engineering, Inc.
Stantec
Terra Site Constructors, LLC
Terracon Consultants, Inc.
TREVIICOS Corporation
US Army Corps of Engineers
US Bureau of Reclamation
Virginia Department of Transportation
UNCANDUNCANGRADUATE STUDENTENDOWMENT
Tom and Aida Brandon
John Duncan, Mary Duncan, Susan Duncan Lee and Evan Lee
George and Lindy Filz
Mary Hunter
Qamar Kaxmi
Meeok Kim
Scott Mackey
Ray and Carol Martin
Alex Reeb
Sandy Simpkins
Rich Zeigler
VIA DONORS
2017-2018
47
THE CHARLES E. VIA, JR. DEPARTMENT OFCIVIL AND ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING750 DRILLFIELD DRIVE200 PATTON HALLBLACKSBURG, VA 24061
Non-Profit Org.U.S. Postage
PAIDBlacksburg, VA
24060Permit No. 28